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Free  Speech  Bibliography 


Including  Every   Discovered   Attitude   Toward   the 

Problem  Covering  Every  Method  of  Transmitting 

Ideas  and  of  Abridging  Their  Promulgation 

Upon   Every   Subject  -  Matter 


THEODORE  SCHROEDER 

Secretary  and  Attorney  of 

THE  FREE  SPEECH  LEAGUE 


NEW  YORK 

THE  H.  W.  WILSON  COMPANY 

LONDON:  GRAFTON  &  CO. 
1922 


RiPLAONG 


Printed  in  the  U.  S.  A. 


^35 


AN   EXPLANATION 

First  let  me  say  that  I  use  the  word  "speech"  in  its  broadest  sense  as  in- 
cluding every  method  of  transmitting  intellectual  light  and  heat.  When  con- 
fronted with  the  task  of  making  classifications  for  this  bibliography  I  was  per- 
plexed by  the  absence  of  precedent.  First  came  the  thought  of  a  chronological 
arrangement,  with  author  and  subject-index.  With  a  chronological  arrangement, 
every  item  of  one's  interest  might  be  found  on  a  different  page,  needing  to  be 
traced  by  oft  repeated  references  to  the  subject  index.  Hence  a  waste  of  time. 
The  chronological  arrangement  has  obvious  advantages  only  for  students  of  the 
historical  development  of  the  free  speech  issue. 

One  asks,  why  not  make  a  subdivision  on  the  basis  of  the  external  circum- 
stances to  which  censorship  is  applied.  Thus :  Street-speaking,  Theatre,  Moving 
pictures,  Parks,  Post  Office,  Express,  Inter-State  Commerce,  Newspapers,  Maga- 
zines, Pictures,  etc.  This  again  involves  and  multiplies  the  same  confusion  as 
the  chronological  arrangement,  and  would  furnish  a  minimum  of  help  to  those 
seeking  light.  Persons  using  this  bibliography  will  seldom  have  their  interests 
centre  around  the  physical  circumstances  of  censorship.  That  interest  is  more 
likely  to  be  motived  in  some  fundamental  lust  for  power,  satisfiable  by  means  of 
reputation,  of  property,  or  of  political  and  religious  institutions,  and  sexual  cus- 
toms. This  reference  to  the  human  impulses  that  make  for  censorship  may  almost 
be  called  the  psycho-genetic  approach  to  a  bibliographical  classification.  From 
this  point  of  view,  most  censorships  would  be  classified  under  such  heads  as  sex 
motive,  religious  motive,  economic  motive,  personal  motive,  etc.  Under  each 
of  these  could  be  subheads  which  relate  more  specifically  to  the  motive,  or  other 
classifiable  quality  of  the  censored  expression  or  persons.  Thus  economic  motive 
would  have  such  subhead  as  socialism,  anarchism,  labor  unions,  etc.  Under  sex 
motive  we  should  think  of  birth  control,  sex-education,  sex-reformers,  etc.  Under 
religious  motives  come  blasphemy,  Church  and  State,  etc. 

There  is  a  marked  change  in  the  character  of  the  discussion  of  mental  free- 
dom between  the  eighteenth  and  nineteenth  centuries.  Under  the  former  rule 
by  an  alleged  divine  right,  liberty  and  censorship  upon  every  subject  found  their 
strongest  justification  in  what  was  claimed  to  be  the  will  of  God.  All  was  based 
upon  the  union  of  the  privileged  Church  and  the  State.  .-Xll  was  justified  by  bib- 
lical interpretations,  and  theologic  dogma.  Then  it  was  scarcely  safe  to  urge 
merely  considerations  of  temporal  expediency,  or  of  right,  not  based  upon  "the 
will  of  God",  as  revealed  in  "Holy  Writ".  Yet,  these  older  discussions  have 
great  historic  value,  for  the  better  understanding  of  our  constitutional  guaran- 
tees of  free  speech.  By  whatever  name  called,  all  the  old  epithetic  characterizations 
of  the  suppressed  idea  were  originally  but  different  names  for  blasphemy.  All 
attacks  upon  government,  established  economic  and  social  privileges,  and  re- 
ligious institutions,  were  thought  pernicious,  primarily  because  they  were  believed 
to  be  somehow  a  denial  of  Holy  Writ,  as  interpreted  by  the  official  Christianity- 
Treason  against  God  was  necessarily  a  treason  against  His  State,  and  treason 
against  the  divinely  ordained  State  was  always  a  treason  against  God.  Blasphemy 
and  Sedition  were  really  the  same.  Accordingly  I  have  thought  it  best  to  place 
all  material  bearing  date  before  the  year  1800  in  a  separate  group.  Because  its 
interest  lies  wholly  in  its  historical  value,  I  have  thought  to  enhance  that  value 
by  a  chronological  arrangement. 

With  the  American  and  French  Revolution  men  began  to  repudiate  political 
"divine  right",  and  to  insist  upon  "natural  rights"  and  temporal  expediency  and 
the  guarantees  of  written  constitutions.     It  is  in  the  previous  controversies  that 


we  must  find  the  meaning  of  the  decisions  expressed  in  our  bills  of  rights.  It  is 
these  earlier  grievances  and  demands  that  must  be  understood,  if  we  are  ever  to 
achieve  an  intelligent  historical  interpretation  of  our  guarantees  for  intellectual 
liberty  and  equality. 

The  "divine  will"  in  censorship  has  not  recommended  itself  highly  by  its 
achievement.  More  and  more  reliance  is  based  upon  social  expediency.  With 
the  disappearance  of  a  single  standard  of  divine  revelation,  as  a  basis  for  censor- 
ship, we  find  a  growing  diversity  in  the  ideas  which  are  suppressed  and  in  the 
subtle  disguises  under  which  the  extensions  of  censorship  are  made.  Formerly 
the  justifying  pretence  was  a  danger  to  man's  everlasting  soul.  Now  we  have 
invented  new  justifications  for  indulging  the  same  old  childish  fears,  and  the 
resultant  brutal  resentment.  These  new  justifications,  according  to  my  view,  are 
based  upon  ignorant  conceptions  of  the  psychology  or  suggestion.  Soon  these 
problems  will  be  differently  handled  by  the  genetic  psychologists.  For  this  reason 
also  I  deem  it  desirable  to  make  a  classification  on  the  basis  of  the  motive  for 
censorship. 

With  these  changing  attitudes,  and  the  multiplication  of  our  petty  tyrants, 
according  to  the  more  democratic  fashion,  there  has  come  a  corresponding  growth 
in  the  modes  and  subjects  of  censorships.  This  ever  spreading  restraint  upon 
freedom  of  utterance  is  commensurate  with  the  growing  diversity  of  method  for 
expressing  and  transmitting  ideas.  Thus  come  discussions  which  cannot  logically 
or  helpfully  be  forced  into  any  of  the  time-honored  moulds,  or  groupings.  If 
now  we  insist  upon  doing  so  we  shall  have  to  extend  them  into  fields  which  have 
not  heretofore  acquired  the  familiar  labels.  This  would  create  new  confusion,  more 
than  sufficient  to  counterbalance  the  advantage  of  retaining  the  old  names. 

When  we  have  thus  made  a  classification  into  the  larger  groups  according  to 
the  impulse  that  makes  for  censorship,  and  sub-classifications  according  to  charac- 
teristics belonging  to  the  censored,  then  there  still  remain  discussions  which 
our  present  habits  of  thought  seem  to  place  outside  any  of  these  groups.  Here 
I  have  in  mind  discussions  of  the  Alien  &  Sedition  Laws,  and  the  war  censorship. 
These  may  be  best  placed  in  a  separate  group.  There  exists  also  some  discussions 
of  free  speech  whose  character  is  too  general  for  special  classification,  or  is  un- 
known. These  items  will  be  found  under  the  head  of  General  Discussions.  An 
author's  index  covering  the  whole  list  under  alphabetical  arrangement  will  furnish 
another  avenue  of  approach  to  the  contents  of  this  bibliography. 

Having  now  outlined  the  method  of  classifications  let  me  indicate  the  mode 
of  reasoning  by  which  the  classification  may  be  discovered  in  cases  of  obscurity. 
Where  should  one  look  for  a  discussion  of  contempt  of  court?  Let  us  assume 
that  the  contempt  proceedings  are  based  upon  a  violation  of  an  injunction  against 
a  strike.  Here  are  two  probable  motives  involved.  The  obvious  one  is  the  eco- 
nomic motive,  which  makes  the  first  classification.  But  again  the  vanity  and  repu- 
tation of  the  judge  may  be  impaired,  especially  if  he  is  denounced  in  addition  to 
being  defied.  Here  then  the  impulse  of  the  judge  is  such  as  if  he  had  been 
slandered.  Therefore,  such  an  item,  like  all  contempts  that  are  based  on  criticism 
or  disrespect  of  courts,  should  be  classified  also  under  "personal  motive".  The 
same  would  be  more  or  less  true  of  a  public  discussion  which  might  appear  as  an 
interference  with  the  judge's  mode  of  conducting  a  trial.  If  instead  of  being  a 
criminal  trial  it  was  one  over  property  rights,  then  the  economic  motive  also 
exists  and  classification  is  made  accordingly. 

Thus  also,  the  defamation  of  a  play,  and  not  of  an  actor,  is  classified  under 
"economic-motive"  as  affecting  the  finances  of  the  author  and  producer.  If  the 
denunciation  or  censorship  was  upon  account  of  its  "obscenity"  it  will  be  also 
classified  under  "sex-motive".  If  the  discussion  is  one  of  the  right  to  defame  an 
actor,  then  the  classification  is  "personal-motive".  Likewise  a  discussion  of  "slan- 
der of  title"  to  property  would  obviously  involve  the  economic-motive.  Suppres- 
sions because  of  aspersions  of  a  class,  such  as  Jews,  Irish,  Germans,  Catholics, 
etc.,  partake  of  the  nature  of  personal  libel  and  slander  because  effecting  per- 
sonal reputation.  Therefore,  the  classification  is  under  "personal-motive".  By 
similar  reasoning  a  postal  censorship  over  business  methods,  as  in  fraudulent 


representation  by  mails  would  be  classified  under  "economic-motive".  The  same 
is  true  where  a  libel  is  charged  because  of  a  false  report  as  to  one's  financial  re- 
sponsibility. This,  however,  might  also  have  the  aspect  of  a  personal  libel.  There 
has  also  been  discussion  and  litigation  over  a  law  requiring  publicity  as  to  the 
ownership  of  periodicals.  The  reason  for  this  legislation  was  to  preclude  secrecy 
as  to  motives  for  articles  and  advertising  involving  industrial  and  economic  ques- 
tions.   This  again  determines  the  classification  as  under  "economic-motive". 

In  gathering  material  for  this  bibliography,  I  received  aid  from  many  friends 
of  free  speech,  1  received  specially  valuable  help  from  the  Yale  University  Library. 
Among  the  individuals  who  gave  valuable  aid  I  make  grateful  acknowledgment 
to  Mr.  Herbert  C.  Collar  and  Miss  Janet  Frederica  Melvain,  then  of  the  New 
York  Public  Library  School ;  and  Mr.  Gordon  Thayer  of  the  Harvard  Library. 
Last  but  not  least  I  make  grateful  acknowledgment  for  help  through  many  years, 
given  to  me  by  my  wife  and  co-worker  (Miss  Nancy  E.  Sankey-Jones).  It  is 
probable  that  a  supplement  to  this  bibliography  will  be,  sometime,  published.  I 
will  therefore  be  grateful  if  any  persons  will  call  my  attention  to  omissions  of 
needed  additions. 

Cos  Cob,  Connecticut.  THEODORE  SCHROEDER. 


ABBREVIATIONS 

ifft 

Abbreviations  at  lower  «*gbt  hand  side  of  entry  indicate   sources  of  information.     When  entry   is 
marked  TS,  the  book  or  pamphlet  is  to  be  found  in  Mr.  Schroeder's  library. 


AMI  Annual  Magazine  Subject  Index 

B  Boston   Public   Library 

HCL  Harvard  College  Library 

ILP  Index  to  Legal   Periodicals 

LC  Library  of  Congress 

MEP  Monthly   Educational  Publications 

NY  New   York   Public   Library 

PAIS  Public  Affairs  Information  Service 


PAR      Periodical   Articles  on    Religion 

RG  Readers'  Guide  to  Periodical  Litera- 

ture 

RGS  Readers'  Guide  Supplement  (now 
called  International  Index  to 
Periodicals) 

TS  Theodore   Schroeder 

use      United    States   Catalog 

Y  Yale  University  Library 


TABLE  OF  CONTENTS 

Part      I.    Before  1800 1-51 

Part    II.   General  Discussions  51-83 

Part  III.   Alien  and  Sedition  Laws  of  1768  83-87 

Part  IV.   Economic  Motive  87-114 

General  and  Historical  Discussions   87-92 

Anarchists     92-98 

Bolshevists  and  Communists   98-99 

Fraud  99-100 

Industrial  Workers  of  the  World    100-102 

Injunctions   102 

(J^abor  Unionists    103-104 

Property    104 

Sabotage    104 

Slavery,  Chattle   104-107 

Socialists  and  Non-Partisans  107-1 1 1 

Syndicalists    111-112 

Teachers,  Freedom  of   112-114 

Part  V.    Personal  Motive  1 14-132 

General  Discussions  114-1 16 

Contempt  of  Court   116-118 

Legal  Discussions  118-126 

Trials    126-132 

Part  VI.    Religious  Motive   132-170 

General    132-153 

Blasphemy    153-160 

Church  and  State  160-166 

Heresy   166-168 

Theater    169-170 

Part    VII.   Sedition   171-178 

Part  VIII.    Sex   Motive    178-209 

General    178-186 

Art    186-188 

Birth  Control  188-193 

Literature    (General)    193-197 

Reformers    198-203 

Scientific  and  Medical   203-205 

Theater    205-206 

Trials  and  Legal  Discussions   206-209 

Part  IX.   War  Motive  209-227 

General   Discussions    209-224 

Trials,  Reports  of,  and  Legal  Treatises  224-227 

Part  X.  Suppressed  Publications  227-239 


Free  Speech  Bibliography 

Part  I.     Before   1800 

Chronological  Arrangement 


Previous  to  1 600 

[PJurgatorium  detractorum  saluberimu,  quo 
quide  detractores  ipsi  aliene  vite  te- 
merarij  iudices  .  .  .  [Anon.]  Colophon, 
In  domo  Quentell   1509    [27]ff  40  lines 

B 

Netherlands  (before  1581)  Laws,  statutes, 
etc..  1506-1555 
Ordonnatie  ende  Edict  des  Keysers 
Kaerle  die  v.  vcrnicuwt  inde  April,  int 
iaer  MCCCCCL;  om  textirpere  en  te 
nyete  to  brenge  die  secte  ende  errucren, 
opgeresen  teghe  theylighe  kersten 
ghelooue  ende  tegen  die  ordonancicn 
van  onser  mocder  der  heyligher  kercken; 
metten  cataloghe  van  den  ghere- 
probeerde  ende  verboden  boecke:  ende 
oick  vande  goeden  boecken,  die  men 
den  ionghen  scholieren  sal  moghe 
leeren;  by  aduyse  vande  Rectoer,  ende 
die  vander  Universiteyt  van  Loeuen. 
Gheprint  te  Loeuen  voirs,  by  Seruaes 
Sassenus,  ghesworen  printer.  Duer 
beueel  der  Keyserlijcker  Maiesteit 
[1550]  45p 

LC 

Beze,  Theodore    de,    1519-1605 

De  haereticis  a  civili  magistratu  punicndis 
libellus  .  .  .  Paris  1554 

Munster,  Sebastian,   1489-1552 

.  .  .  Cosmographiae  uniuersalis  lib.  VT  in 
quibus  iuxta  ccrtioris  fidei  scriptorum 
traditionem  describuntur,  omnium  ha- 
bitabilis  orbis  partium  situs,  propriae- 
que  dotes  .  .  .  Item  omnium  gentium 
mores,  leges,  religio,  mutationes:  atque 
memorabiliuin  in  hunc  usque  annum 
1554  gcstarum  historia.  [Colophon: 
Basileae,  apud  Henrichum  Petri  1554] 

LC 

Proclamation  for  suppressing  heretical 
books  .  .  .   13th  June.   London   1555 

Netherlands  (before  1581)  Laws,  statutes, 
etc..  1555-1581 
Philippi  II  regis  catholic!  edictum  de 
Librorum  prohibitorum  catalogo  obscr- 
uando.  .A^ntverpiae,  Ex  otficina  Christo- 
phori  Plantini   1570  [14]p 

LC 

Whitgift,  John,  1530-1603   (or  4) 

Defense  of  the  aunswere  to  the  Admoni- 
tion against  the  replie  of  T.  Cartwright. 
London,  Humfrey  Toye   1574 


Northbrooke,  J. 

Treatise  against  dicing,  dancing,  plays 
and  interludes.   1577 

[Languet,  Hubert]  1518-1581 
Vindiciae  contra  tyrannos;  sive  de  princi- 
pis  in  populum  populique  in  principem 
iegitima  potestate,  Stephano  Junio 
Bruto  Cclta  auctore.  Edinburgh  1579 
Same;  tr.  with  subtitle:  a  defense  of  lib- 
erty against  tyrants;  or,  of  the  lawful 
power  of  the  prince  over  the  people, 
and  of  the  people  over  the  prince;  being 
a  treatise  written  in  Latin  and  French 
by  Junius  Brutus,  and  translated  out 
of  both  into  English.  Questions  dis- 
cussed in  this  treatise  [by  Hubert 
Languet.]  London,  R.  Baldwin  1689 
164p 

TS 

An   extreme   believer   in   divine   right   of   kings, 
and    tyranny    consists    in    popular    limitation    of  I 
prerogatives,     and    yet    saw    clearly    limitlcssncss  , 
of     intellectual     liberty.       Quoted     in     Schroedcr,  i 
T.      "Constitutional    free    speech,"    p    406-7.  \ 

Appeared  under  the  name  of  Junius  Brutus. 
Authorship    disputed. 

Lodge,  T. 

Defense  of  poetry,  music  and  stageplavs. 
1579 

Browne.  Robert 

Treatise  of  reformation  without  tarry- 
ing for  magistrates  and  of  the  wicked- 
ness of  those  preachers  which  will  not 
reforme  till  the  magistrates  commande 
or  compcll  them.  Middleburg  1582 
Only  three  copies  known.     Reprint   at   Boston. 

Index  librorum  expurgandorura 

Book  censorship  (books  published  by 
Spanish  authority).  Madrid,  .Mphons 
Gomezium    1584    159]) 

Elizabeth.  Queen  of  England,  1533-1603 
Proclamation     against     certain     seditious 
and  schismatical  books  and  libels,  etc. 
[Feb.    13,    1588]    [London    1846]    4p 
B 

Gallonio,    Antonio,    1550?-1605 

Tortures  and  torments  of  the  Christian 
martyrs  from  the  De  SS.  martyrum 
cruciatibus  of  the  Rev  Father  Gallonio. 
now  for  the  first  time  translated,  by 
A.   R.   Allinson.    [1591]    Paris   1903 

Gallonio's  work,  published  in  1591,  has  been 
described  as  a  sort  of  Catholic  Foxe's  Book  of 
martyrs. 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Cosin,  Richard 

Apologie  for  sundrie  proceedings  by 
jurisdiction  ecclesiastical,  of  late  times 
by  some  chalengcd,  and  also  diuersly 
by  them  impugned  .  .  .  whereunto  .  .  . 
I  have  presumed  to  adioine  .  .  .  (con- 
cerning oaths)  by  Lancelot  Andrews, 
D.   D.  n.p.   1593 

17th  Century 
1600-1610 

Examiner  defended.     London?   16 — ? 
HCL 

Dury,  John 

Epistolary  discourse,  wherein  (amongst 
other   particulars)    the   following   ques- 

\  tions  are  briefly  resolved:  1.  Whether 
or  no  the  state  should  tolerate  the 
independent  government;  2.  If  they 
should  tolerate  it,  how  farre,  and  with 
what  limitations;  3.  If  they  should  not 
tolerate  it,  what  course  should  be 
taken  to  bring  them  to  a  conformity 
with  the  letter.  London,  Printed  by 
Thomas   Este    [1600?] 

Muriell,  Christopher 

Answer  to  the  Catholick's  supplication 
for  toleration  of  their  religion  in  Eng- 
land.  London    1603 

Refutation  of  a  Puritan  papist,  persuad- 
ing the  permission  of  promiscuous  use 
of  all  sects  and  heresies.   London   1605 

Garnet,  S.  J. 

True  and  perfect  relation  of  the  whole 
proceedings  against  the  late  most  bar- 
barous traitors,  Garnet  a  Tcsuit.  and 
his  confederates,  contayning  sundry 
speeches  and  all  that  passed  at  Garnet's 
execution,   n.p.   1606 

Haywarde,  Sir  John 

Report  of  a  discourse  concerning  supreme 
power  in  aflFaires  of  religion,  mani- 
festing that  this  power  is  a  right  of 
regalitie,  inseparably  annexed  to  the 
soveraigntie  of  every  state,  and  that 
it  is  a  thing  both  extreamely  danger- 
ous, and  contrarie  to  the  use  of  all 
auncient  empires  and  commonwealths, 
to  acknowledge  the  same  in  a  forraine 
prince.  London,  F.  K.  for  John  Hardie 
1606 

To  the  right  high  and  mightie  prince,  James 
1   .  .  .    King   of   Great    Britannie,    France, 
j  and   Irelande   ...   an   humble   supplica- 
tion  for  toleration  and   libertie   ...   in 
th'  administration  of  .  .  .  churches  .  .  . 
[London?]    1609  48p 


B 


1610-1620 


Legate,  Bartholomew,  and  Wightman,  Ed- 
ward 

i  Ca-^es  of  Bartholomew  Legate  and  Ed- 
ward Wightman  for  heresy.  [1612]  (In: 
Howell,   T.   B.   Complete   collection   of 


state  trials.  2:727-42.  London,  Long- 
man, Hurst,  Rees,  Orme  &  Browne 
1816) 

Legate  was  burned  to  death  for  his  religious 
beliefs  in  March,  1612,  and  Wightman  suffered 
a  like  fate  in  April,  1612.  Legate  was  the 
last  person  to  be  burned  to  death  for  this  reason 
in  London,  and  Wightman  was  the  last  person 
to   die   thus   in   all    England. 

Abstracted  in:  Schroeder,  T.  Constitutional 
free  speech. 

Busher,  Leonard,  fl.    1614 

Religious  peace;  or,  a  plea  for  liberty 
of  conscience;  long  since  presented  to 
King  Tames,  and  printed  in  the  year 
1614.  (In:  Underbill,  E.  B.,  ed.  Tracts 
on  liberty  of  conscience  and  persecu- 
tion. 1614-1661.     pl-81     London  1846) 

Objections:  answered  by  way  of  dialogue, 
wherein  is  proved  by  the  law  of  God; 
by  the  law  of  our  land;  and  by  His 
Majesty's  [King  James's]  many  testi- 
monies that  no  man  ought  to  be  perse- 
cuted for  his  religion,  so  he  testifie  his 
allegeance  by  the  oath,  appointed  by 
law.  Printed  1615  (In:  Underbill,  E.  B. 
Tracts  on  liberty  of  conscience  .  .  . 
1614-1661.   p83-180     London    1846) 

B   Y 

First    printed    in    1615. 

Andreas,  Valerius 

Quaestiones  quodlibeticae  tres  III.  Quae 
commodior  faciliorque  ad  convincendos 
sectarios  nostros  via,  an  non  ea,  qua 
propris  quis  eos  gladis  iugulet,  quoties 
velad  Scripturam  Sacram  vel  ad  patres 
linguasque  concurrunt?  Coloniae  Agrip- 
pinae  1618 

HCL 

Perkins,    William,    1558-1602 
Cases  of  conscience.     1619 

1620-16.30 

Howard,     Henry,     earl     of     Northampton, 
1539M614 
Defensativc   against    the    poyson    of   sup- 
posed prophecies.  London,  W.  Jaggard 
1620 

[Patterson,    Matthew] 
Image  of  bothe  churches,  Hierusalem  and 
Babel,  unitie   and  confusion,  obedience 
and   sedition,   by   P.    D.    M.   Printed   at 
Tornay   1623 

Short  treatise  against  stage   plays.     1625 

Calderwood,   David,   1575-1650 

The  history  of  Scotland  edited  from  the 
original  manuscript  preserved  in  the 
British  Museum  by  the  Rev  Thomas 
Thomson.  Edinburgh,  Woodrow  so- 
ciety  1842  8v 

Sprinkled  through  these  volumes  is  much 
detailed  information  of  the  persecution  in  Scot- 
land. 

Denison,  Stephen 

White  wolfe;  or,  A  sermon  preached  at 
Paul's  Cross,  Feb.  11,  being  the  last 
Sunday  in  Hillarie  tearme,  anno  1627, 
and  printed  somewhat  more  largely 
than  the  time  would  permit  at  the 
present   to   deliver;    wherein    faction   is 


FREE  SPEECH 


unmasked,  and  duly  taxed  without 
malice,  for  the  safetie  of  weake  Chris- 
tians, especially  the  Hetheringtonian 
faction  grovvne  very  impudent  in  this 
citie  of  late  years,  is  here  confuted. 
London,    George    Miller    [1627]    76p 

Gives  the  only  known  account  of  prosecution 
for  blasphemy  of  John  Hetherington. 

Leighton,   Alexander,    1568-1644? 

Appeal  to  the  Parliament;  or,  Sion's  plea 
against   the   prelacie.    1628 

For  this  book  he  was  convicted,  but  later 
released  by  the  Long  Parliament.  See: 
Schroeder,    T.     Constitutional   free   speech,   pi94- 

207. 

B[urton]    Henry 

Babel  no  Bethel;  that  is,  the  Church  of 
Rome  no  true  visible  church  of  Christ, 
n.p.  1629 

Chassarnan,    John 

Merchandizes  of  popish  priests:  or,  A 
discoverie  of  the  Jesuites  trumpery, 
newly  packed  in  England:  laying  open 
to  the  world  how  cunningly  they  cheat 
and  abuse  people,  with  their  false,  de- 
ccitfull  and  counterfeit  wares:  truely  tr. 
into  English.  London,  Henry  Gosson 
1629 

Rainolds,  John,   1549-1607 

Overthrow  of  stage-playes,  by  the  way 
of  controversie  betwixt  D.  Gagcr  and 
D.  Rainoldes,  wherein  all  the  reasons 
that  can  be  made  for  them  are  notably 
refuted;  the  obicctions  answered,  and 
the  case  so  cleared  and  resolved,  as 
that  the  judgment  of  any  man,  that  is 
not  froward  and  preversc,  may  easilie 
bee  satisfied.  .  .  .  2d  ed  Oxford,  Printed 
by  John  Lichfield  for  E.  Forrest  &  W. 
Webbe   1629  190p 

LC   Y 

1630-1640 

Usher,  James,   1580-1656 

.•\n  answer  to  a  challenge,  made  by  a  Tes- 
uite  in  Ireland;  A  discourse  of  the 
religion  anciently  professed  by  the 
Irish  and  British;  ...  A  brief  declara- 
tion of  the  universalitie  of  the  church 
.  .  .  Dublin?  Printed  by  R.  Y.  for  the 
partners  of  the  Irish  Stocke   1631 

An  answer  to  a  challenge,  made  by  a  Jes- 
uite  in  Ireland,  was  first  published  in  Dublin. 
1623;  A  discourse  of  the  religion  anciently 
professed  by  the  Irish     .     .     .     ,   in  London.   i6,?i. 

Lipsius,   Justus,    1547-1606 

I.  Lipsi  Politicorum;  sive,  Civilis  doc- 
trinae  libri  sex;  qui  ad  principatuin 
niaxime  spectant.  Additae  notae  auc- 
tiores,  tum  &  De  una  religionc  Vihcr 
.  .  .  Amsterdaini,  G.  Blaev  1632  308.  86, 
52p 

LC 

Prynne.    William,    1600-1669 

Histrio-mastix;  the  player's  scourge,  or 
actor's  traga?die,  divided  into  two  parts. 
London.  Sparke   1633    [34],   1006,    [40] p 

B  Y 

For  this  Prynne  was  convicted.  See: 
Schroeder.  T.  Constitutional  free  speech,  p207- 
10;  also  Howell's,  State  trials,  v  3. 


Crell,  Johann,  1590-1633 

Juni  Bruti  Poloni  [pseud.]  vindiciae  pro 
religionis   libertate.    Eleutheropoli    1637 

HCL 

Decree  of  Starre  chamber  concerning  print- 
ing, made  the  eleventh  day  of  July,  last 
part  1637.  Imprinted  at  London  by 
Robert  Barker,  printer  to  the  King's 
Most  Excellent  Majestic,  and  by  the 
assignes  of  John   Bill   1637 

Hall,   Joseph 

Remedy  of  prophanenesse;  or,  The  true 
sight  and  fear  of  the  Almighty,  a 
needful  tractate  (including  a  sermon  at 
Exeter  at  the  consecration  of  a  new 
buriall-place  there.  Aug.  24,  1637.  Lon- 
don, Tliomas  Harper   1637 

Laud,  William,  archbishop  of  Canterbury, 
1573-1645 
Speech  delivered  in  the  Starr-chamber, 
on  Wednesday,  the  XlVth  of  Tune 
MDCXXXVII,  at  the  censure  of  John 
Bastwick,  Henry  Burton  and  William 
Prinn,  concerning  pretended  innova- 
tions in  the  church.  London,  R.  Badger 
1637  77 V 

[Prynne,  William]  1600-1669 
Breviate  of  the  prelate's  intolerable 
usurpationcs,  both  upon  the  king's 
prerogative  royall  and  the  subject's 
liberties,  dedicated  to  King  Charles 
1st;  signed  Williams  Huntley.  3d  ed 
much    enlarged    1637   325p 

Printed   under   the   name   of   W.    Huntley,   but 
supposed   to   be   by    Prynne. 

Brief  relation  of  certaine  speciall  and  most 
materiall  passages  and  speeches  in  the 
Starre  chamber,  occasioned  and  de- 
livered Tunc  the  14th,  1637,  at  the  cen- 
sure of  those  three  worthy  gentlemen, 
Dr  Bastwicke,  Mr  Burton  and  Mr 
Prynne,  as  hath  beene  truly  and  faith- 
fully gathered  from  their  owne  mouthes 
by  those  present  at  the  censure,  n.p. 
Printed  in  the  year  1638 

Y 

Rivet,  Andre,   1572P-1651 

Instruction  chrcstienne,  touchant  les 
spectacles  publics  des  comoedies  et 
tragcedies  ...  La  Haye,  Le  Maire  1639 
132p 

1640-1650 

Digby,  George,   1612-1676 

Third  speech  of  the  Lord  George  Digby 
(Earl  of  Bristol)  to  the  House  of  com- 
mons, concerning  bishops,  and  the 
Citic  petition,  the  9th  of  Feb.,  1640. 
[London?]  Printed  for  Thomas  Walk- 
ley  1640 

Articles  exhibited  against  William  Beale 
[for  pro-Popery  activities  at  Cambridge 
and   elsewhere].   1641 

Burton,  Henry 

Protestation  protested;  or,  A  short  re- 
monstrance, showing  what  is  principally 
required  of  all  those  that  have  or  doe 
take  the  last  parliamentary  protesta- 
tion, n.p.   1641.  24p 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


C[otton],  R 

Serious  considerations  for  repressing  of 
the  increase  of  Jcsuitcs,  priests  and  pap- 
ist without  shedding  of  blood.  Pre- 
sented to  King  James  of  Happic  Mem- 
ory, Printed  1641 
Edwards,  Thomas 

Reasons  against  the  independent  govern- 
ment of  particular  congregations,  as 
also  against  the  toleration  of  such 
churches  to  be  erected  in  this  king- 
dome.  1641  56p 
Fiennes,   Nathaniel,   1608?- 1669 

Speech  of  the  Honourable  Nathanael 
Fiennes  ...  in  answer  to  the  third 
speech  of  the  Lord  George  Digby,  con- 
cerning bishops  and  the  city  of  Lon- 
don's petition;  both  which  were  made 
the  9th  of  Feb.  1640  in  the  honourable 
House  of  commons  .  .  .  [London]   1641 

With  his  Second  speech  .  .  .  Touching  the 
subjects  liberty  against  the  late  canons,  and  the 
new  oath. 

Second  speech  of  the  Honourable  Nath- 
anael Fiennes  ...  in  the  Commons 
house  of  Parliament;  touching  the  sub- 
jects liberty  against  the  late  canons, 
and  the  new  oath.    [London]    1641   20p 

LC 

Hakewil,  William,  of  Lincolns  Inne 

Libertie  of  the  subject  against  the  pre- 
tended power  of  impositions,  maintained 
by  an  argument  in  Parliament,  ano  70, 
Jacobi  Regis.  Printed  by  R.  H.  1641 

Hughes,    William,    of    Grayes    Inne 

Parson's  law,  collected  out  of  the  whole 
body  of  the  common  law,  and  some  late 
records.  London,  Printed  for  the  author 
1641 

TS 

— Same.  3d  ed  [London]  George  Dawes 
[Before   1680] 

Appears  to  cover  every  phase  of  law  then 
existing  to  accomplish  a  union  of  church  and 
state. 

New  discovery  of  the  prelates  tyranny  in 
their  late  prosecutions  of  William  Pryn, 
Dr.  John  Bastwick,  and  Henry  Burton, 
the  proceedings  against  them  in  the 
High  commission  and  star  chamber, 
their  petitions,  speeches,  etc.  Printed 
from   ms.    1641 

Pack  of  Puritans;  maintayning  the  unlaw- 
fulnesse  or  unexpediencie  or  both;  as 
also  a  defense  of  the  authority  of  prin- 
ces and  parliaments  to  intermeddle 
with  matters  of  religion,  and  a  Dis- 
course whether  things  consecrated  may 
be    alienated.    1641    60p 

Feme,   Henry 

Resolving  of  conscience,  etc.  1642 

Griffith,  Matthew 

Patheticall  perswasion  to  pray  for  pub- 
lick  peace  in  a  sermon  at  St  Pauls, 
Oct  2nd,  1642.  n.p.  1642 

For  preaching  this  remarkable  sermon  on  the 
eve  of  the  civil  war  (in  England)  the  author 
was  sent  to  prison.  Another  edition  with  a 
different   title    was   secretly   printed   in    1643. 


Burroughs,  Jeremiah 

Glorious  name  of  God,  the  Lord  of  Hosts, 
with     a     postscript,     briefly    answering 
Henry   Feme.      1643 
Bridge,    William 

Truth  about  the  times  vindicated,  where- 
by the  lawfulness  of  Parliamentary  pro- 
ceedings in  taking  up  arms  is  justified. 
1643 
Cotton,   J[ohn,    1585-1652] 

Discourse  about  civil  government  in  a 
new  plantation  whose  design  is  religion 
(written  many  years  since.)  London 
1643 

"This  is   a   misprint   in   the   title  page   for   the 
author    was    John    Davenport." 

Feme,  Henry 

Resolving  of  conscience,  etc.,  1642;  Glori- 
ous name  of  God,  the  Lord  of  Hosts, 
with  a  postscript,  briefly  answering 
Henry  Feme;  by  Jer.  Burroughs,  1643; 
Wounded  conscience  cured,  the  weak 
one  strengthened,  and  the  doubting 
satisfied,  by  way  of  answer  to  Fearne, 
1642;  Fuller  answer  to  a  treatise  by 
Doctor  Fearne,  1642;  Conscience  satis- 
fied that  there  is  no  warrant  for  the 
armes  now  taken  up  by  subjects,  by 
H.  Feme;  Oxford,  1643;  Answer  to 
Dr  Fern's  reply,  1643;  Truth  about  the 
times  vindicated,  whereby  the  lawful- 
nesse  of  Parliamentary  proceedings  in 
taking  up  arms  is  justified,  by  Wm. 
Bridge,  preacher  at  Great  Yarmouth, 
1643;  The  subject  of  supremacie,  the 
right  of  Caesar,  resolution  of  con- 
science, a  replication  to  the  rcplj'  of 
Dr  Feme,  1643.  Oxford  n.d.  Iv 

Hammond,  [Henry] 

Of  resisting  the  lawfull  magistrate  upon 
colour  of  religion,  n.p.  1643  32p 

Ordinance  of  the  Lords  and  Commons  for 
the  utter  demolishing,  removing  and 
taking  away  of  all  monuments  of  super- 
stition or  idolatry  out  of  all  churches 
and  chapells  in  England  and  Wales, 
before  Nov.  1st,  1643.  1643  8p 

Prynne,   William,    1600-1669 

The  popish  royall  favourite;  or,  A  full 
discovery  of  His  Majestie's  extraordin- 
ary favours  to  and  protections  of  notor- 
ious papists,  priests,  Jesuits  against  all 
prosecutions  of  the  laws  enacted  against 
them.  1643 
Soveraigne  power  of  parliaments  and 
kingdoms,  divided  into  foure  parts;  to- 
gether with  an  appendix,  wherein  the 
superiority  of  our  owne  and  most 
other  foreign  parliaments,  states,  king- 
doms, magistrates  over  and  above  their 
lawfull  cmperours,  kings,  princes,  is 
abtmdantly   evidenced.    1643 

Subject  of  supremacie,  the  right  of  Caesar, 
resolution  of  conscience,  a  replication 
to    the   reply   of   Dr   Feme.      1643 

White,  John 

First  century  of  scandalous  malignant 
priests  made  and  admitted  unto  bene- 
fices by  the  prelates  in  whose  hands  the 


FREE  SPEECH 


ordination  of  ministers  and  government 
of  the  church  hath  been,  or  a  narration 
of  the  causes  for  which  Parliament  hath 
ordered  the  sequestration  of  their 
benefices.     London,   G.    Miller   1643 

This  very  rare  volume  contains  the  names  and 
livings  of  100  priests  of  Sussex,  Kent  and  other 
counties  who  are  charged  with  different  crimes. 
It  is  said  to  have  been  rigidly  suppressed  im- 
mediately   after    publication. 

Against  universal  libertie  of  conscience: 
being  animadversions  upon  two  letters 
written  to  a  friend  pleading  for  it. 
1644  8p 

Diggs,   Dudley 

Unlawfulnesse  of  subjects  taking  up  arms 
against  their  soveraigne  in  what  case 
soever.    1644 

Hammond,   Henry 

Resisting  the  lawfull  magistrate  under 
colour  of  religion,  and  appendant  to  it, 
of  the  word  Keiua  rendered  damna- 
tion. Rom.  13.  Reprinted.  Also,  Of  the 
zclots  among  the  Jcwes;  of  taking  up 
the  crosse;  vindication  of  Christ's  re- 
prending  St  Peter;  from  the  excerp- 
tions of  ]\Ir  Marshall.  Oxford,  Printed 
for  H.  H.  and  W.  W.   1644  83p 

TS 

M.  S.  to  A.  S.  [i.  e.  Adam  Steuart] 

With  a  plea  for  libertie  of  conscience 
in  a  church  way,  against  the  cavils  of 
A.  S.  [By  J.  Goodwin];  and  observa- 
tions on  his  considerations  and  anno- 
tations upon  the  apologeticall  narra- 
tion [of  T.  Goodwin  and  others  .  .  .  ] 
London  1644 

Milton,  John,  1608-1674 

Arcopagitica:  a  speech  of  Mr  John  Mil- 
ton for  the  liberty  of  unlicenc'd  print- 
ing, to  the  Parliament  of  England  .  .  . 
[quotation  from  Euripid.  Hicetid.  with 
an  English  translation].  London  1644 
Same,  a  speech  for  the  liberty  of  un- 
licenc'd printing,  to  the  Parliament  of 
England.  London  1644  40p 

Y 

— Same;  first  published  in  the  year  1644; 
with  a  preface  by  another  hand.  Lon- 
don, A.  .Millar   1738  viii,58p 

NY  Y 

— Same.  (In:  F.  Blackburne.  Remarks  on 
Johnson's  Life  of  Milton.  p203-369 
London    1780) 

NY 

For  editions  published  since  i8oo  see  heading 
General. 

Paraentick,  or  humble  addresse  to  the  Par- 
liament and  assembly  for  .  .  .  Chris- 
tian libertie.  London  1644  (In:  Dixon, 
W.  H.  Collection  of  pamphlets,  no. 
231) 

Rutherford,  Samuel,  1600-1661 

Due  right  of  presbyteries,  or  a  peaceable 
plea  for  the  government  of  the  Church 
of  Scotland,  wherein  is  examined:  1, 
The  way  of  the  church  of  Christ  in 
New  England;  2,  Their  apology  for 
said    government;    3,    A    treatise    for    a 


church  covenant;  4,  The  arguments  of 
Mr  Robinson  [Brownist,  leader  of  the 
Pilgrim  fathers]  in  his  "Justification 
of  separation"  are  discovered;  5,  His 
treatise  "The  peoples  plea"  is  tryed; 
6,  Diverse  late  arguments  against  Pres- 
byteriall  government,  etc.,  arc  dis- 
cussed. [London?]  1644 
Lex  Rex:  the  law  and  the  prince.  1644 
Ordered  to  be  burnt  by  the  hands  of  a  com- 
mon hangman.      Suppressed  in   i66o. 

[Williams,  Roger]   ca   1606-1683 

Bloudy  tenant  of  persecution,  for  cause 
of  conscience,  discussed,  in  a  confer- 
ence betweene  truth  and  peace;  who, 
in  all  tender  affection,  present  to  the 
High  court  of  Parliament,  (as  the  re- 
sult of  their  discourse)  these,  (amongst 
other  passages)  of  highest  considera- 
tion. [London?]  Printed  in  tlic  year 
1644  12,  247p 

LC  Y 

This  is  the  beginning  of  religious  liberty  in 
America.  For  editions  after  i8oo  see  heading 
General. 

Book  was  ordered  by  the  House  of  commons 
to  be  burnt  by  the  hangman. 

Queries  of  highest  consideration,  pro- 
posed to  Mr  Tho.  Goodwin,  Mr  Philip 
Nye,  Mr  Wil  Bridges,  Air  Jer.  Bur- 
roughs, Mr  Sid.  Simpson  and  to  the 
Commissioners  from  the  General  as- 
sembly (so-called)  of  the  Church  of 
Scotland;  upon  occasion  of  their  late 
printed  apologies  for  themselves  and 
their  churches  .  .  .  [Anon]  London, 
Printed   in   the   year    1644  613p 

Letter  against  toleration.    1645 

Lilbume,  John,  c.  1614-1657 

Copie  of  a  letter  to  Mr  William  Prinne, 
upon  the  coming  out  of  his  last  book, 
intituled  Truth  triumphing  over  false- 
hood.   [London   1645] 

HCL 

Vindication  of  foure  serious  questions  of 
grand  importance  concerning  excom- 
munication and  suspension  from  the 
sacrament   of  the  Lord's  supper.   1645 

Anti-toleration;  or,  A  modest  defence  of 
the  letter  of  the  London  ministers  to 
the  reverend  assembly  of  divines;  by 
a  wel-wisher  of  peace  and  truth.  Lon- 
don, Printed  by  John  Field  for  Ralph 
Smith    1646  48p 

B   NY 

Bacon, 

An  ordinance  for  preventing  the  spread- 
ing of  heresies,  presented  to  the  House 
of  commons  by  him  and  Mr  Treat, 
with  observations  thereupon.  London 
1646 

Clarkson,  Lawrence 

Truth  released  from  prison  to  its  former 
libertie;  or,  A  true  discovery  who  are 
the  troublers  of  Israel,  the  disturbers 
of  England's  peace,  etc.  London   1646 

Clarkson  (alias  Claxton)  was  twice  condemned. 
See:  Schroeder,  T.  Constitutional  free  speech, 
P269. 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Cotton,  John,  1585-1652 

Controvcrsic  concerning  liberty  of  con- 
science in  matters  of  religion,  truly- 
stated,  and  distinctly  and  plainly  hand- 
led .  .  .;  by  way  of  answer  to  some 
arguments  to  the  contrary  sent  unto 
him.  London,  Printed  for  Thomas 
Banks    1646    14p 

B  Y 

Hale,  John,  1584-1656 

Of  the  blashemy  against  the  Holy  Ghost. 
London    1646 

Leighton,  Alexander,    1568-1644? 

Epitome  or  brief  discovery  from  the  be- 
ginning to  the  end  of  the  great  troubles 
that  Dr  Leighton  suffered  in  his  body, 
estates,  and  family,  wherein  is  laid 
down  the  cause  of  those  sufferings, 
namely,  that  book  called  Sion's  plea 
against  prelacie.   London   1646 

Trial  reported  in:  Schroeder,  T.  Constitu- 
tional   free    speech. 

Prynne,  William,  1600-1669 

Distrephes  catechised;  or.  Sixteen  im- 
portant questions  touching  the  ecclesi- 
astical jurisdiction  and  censures  [con- 
tra-distinct to  civil].  1646 

Prynne's  trial  reported  in:  Schroeder,  T. 
Constitutional    free    speech. 

Suspension  suspended;  or.  The  divines 
of  Syon-Colledge  late  claim  of  the 
power  of  suspending  scandalous  per- 
sons  from   the    Lord's   supper.    1646 

Vindication  of  a  printed  paper,  intituled 
-An  ordinance,  presented  to  the  House 
of  commons,  for  preventing  the  growth 
and  spreading  of  heresies,  against  the 
irreligious  and  presumptuous  excep- 
tions call'd  Some  humble  and  modest 
ciueries.    1646  41p 

Workman,   Giles 

Private-men  no  pulpit-men;  or,  A  modest 
examination  of  lay-men's  preaching. 
1646 

[Allestree,  Richard]    1619-1681 

Government  of  the  tongue;  by  the  author 

of    The    whole    duty    of    man,    etc.    2d 

impression    At    tlie    theatre    in    Oxford 

1647    [8]    224p 
TS 
— Same.    3d    impression    At    the    theatre    in 

Oxford   1675  224p 
LC  NY 

Cover-title:   Government   for   the   people. 

Has  been  variously  attributed  to  Lady  Dor- 
othy Pakington,  Richard  Sterne,  archbishop  of 
York,  John   Fell,   bishop   of  Oxford,   and  others. 

The  appeal  is  that  none  shall  say  offensive 
words,    nothing   more. 

Cotton,  John,  1585-1652 

Bloody  tenant  washed  and  made  white 
in  the  bloude  of  the  Lambe;  where- 
unto  is  added,  A  reply  to  Mr  Williams' 
answer  to  IMr  Cotton's  letter.  London 
1647 

Edwards,  Thomas,  d.   1647 

Casting  down  of  the  last  and  strongest 
hold    of   Satan;    or,   A   treatise   against 


toleration  and  pretended  liberty  of  con- 
science .  .  .  Part  1.  London,  Printed 
by  T.  R.  and  E.  M.  for  George  Calvert 
1647   [8],  218p 

B 

Further  proposal  from  Fairfax  desiring  the 
discharge  of  all  persons  as  are  impris- 
oned under  pretence  of  coventicles  and 
for  private  meetings  for  religious 
duties,     etc.     London?    G.    Whittington 

1647  12p 
Hammond,  Henry 

Five  propositions  to  the  King's  Majesty 
and  the  army  concerning  church  gov- 
ernment, in  the  ordering  of  the  dis- 
cipline thereof  toward  communicants, 
n.p.   1647  8p 

Richardson,  Samuel,  baptist  minister  of 
London 

Necessity  of  toleration  in  matters  of  re- 
ligion. London,  Printed  in  1647  (In: 
Underbill,  E.  B.,  ed.  Tracts  on  liberty 
of  conscience  and  persecution,  1614- 
1661.  p233-85  London  1846) 
B  Y 

Taylor,   [Jeremy]    1613-1667 

Discourse  of  the  liberty  of  prophesying; 
shewing  the  unreasonableness  of  pre- 
scribing to  other  men's  faith,  and  the 
iniquity  of  persecuting  diflfering  opin- 
ions. London,  R.  Royston  1647  48,  267p 

NY  TS   Y 

Section  XIII.  Of  the  deportment  to  be  used 
towards  persons  disagreeing,  and  the  reasons 
why  they  are  not  to  be  punished  with  death, 
etc. 

Vindication  of  Judge  Jenkins,  prisoner  in 
the  Tower,  the  29th  of  April,  1647  and 
others.   1647 

[Ward,    Nathaniel]    1578?-1652 

Simple  cobbler  of  Aggawam  in  America; 
willing  to  help  mend  his  native  coun- 
try, lamentably  tattered,  both  in  the 
upper-leather  and  sole,  with  all  the 
honest  stitches  he  can  take;  and  as 
willing  never  to  be  paid  for  his  work 
by  old  English  wonted  pay.  It  is  his 
trade  to  patch  all  the  year  long,  gratis; 
therefore  I  pray  gentlement  keep  your 
purses;  bj'  Theodore  de  la  Guard 
[pseud.]  5th  ed.,  with  some  amend- 
ments .  .  .  London,  Printed  by  T.  D.  & 
R.  I.  for  S.  Bowtell  1647.  Reprinted  at 
Boston,  for  D.  Henchman  1713  (Re- 
print in:  Force,  Peter.  Tracts  .  .  . 
Washington  1836-46  v  3  (1844)  no.  8. 
58p) 

LC  NY  Y 

Declaration  of  the  commissioners  of  the 
General  .\sscmbly  .  .  .  concerning 
present  dangers  and  duties  relating  to 
the   covenant  and  religion.    R.  Bostock 

1648  16p 

Feme,  H[enry] 

Feme's  re])ly  ujjon  sevcrall  treatises 
pleading  for  the  amies  now  taken  up 
by  subjects  in  the  pretended  defence  of 
religion   and  liberty.   Oxford   1648 


FREE  SPEECH 


Fry,  John 

Accuser  shamed;  or,  A  pair  of  bellows 
to  blow  off  that  dust  cast  upon  John 
Fry  a  member  of  Parliament,  by  Col- 
onel John  Downs,  likewise  a  member 
of  Parliament,  who  by  the  confederacy 
and  instigation  of  some,  charged  the 
said  J.  F.  of  blasphemy  and  error  to 
the  .  .  .  House  of  commons.  London 
1648 

This  book  was  ordered  burned  by  the  House 
of  commons,  and  Fry  disqualified  from  being 
a   member. 

Hunting  of  the  fox;  or.  The  sectaries  dis- 
sected; in  a  parallel  between  them  and 
foxes  .  .  .  London,  Printed  in  the  yeare 

1648  48p 
B 

Jenkins,  David,  1382-1663 

Works  of  that  grave  and  learned  lawyer 
Judge  Jenkins,  prisoner  in  Newgate; 
upon  divers  statutes,  concerning,  the 
liberty,,  and  freedome  of  the  subject 
.  .  .  London,  Printed  for  T.  Gyles  1648 
12,    199p 

LC 

Ordinance  of  the  Lords  and  Commons  for 
the  punishing  of  blasphemies  and 
heresies  with  the  severall  penalties 
therein   expressed.   1648  6p 

Bayly,  Thomas 

The  royal  charter  granted  unto  kings,  by 
God  himself.  Printed  in  the  year  1649 
This  work  written  to  prove  that  Episcopacy 
is  Jure  Divino,  gave  offense,  and  the  author 
was  imprisoned  in  Newgate.  He  escaped  to  the 
continent,  and  became  a  zealous  Roman  Catho- 
lic. 

Goodwin,  John,  1593-1665 

Obstructors    of    justice.    [London?]    1649 

Attempts    to    justify    his    course    in    promoting 

the    condemnation    of    Charles    I.    At    the    time 

of    the    restoration    this    book    was    burnt    by    the 

common    hangman. 

Humble  petition  and  representation  of  sev- 
eral churches  of  God  in  London,  com- 
monly (though  falsely)  called  Anabap- 
tists, which  was  presented  on  Monday, 
the  second  of  .April,  to  the  Supream 
authority  of  the  nation,  the  Comtnons 
assembled  in  Parliament:  together  with 
the  answer  and  a]T.probation  of  the 
Parliament  thereunto.  London,  Printed 
for    Francis    Tvton    &    Tohn    Plavford 

1649  8p 

Liberty  of  conscience  asserted;  or.  Perse- 
cution for  religion  condemned,  by  the 
laws  of  God,  nature,  reason;  published 
by  a  well-wisher  to  the  kingdomes 
eood  .  .  .  London,  Printed  for  R.  A. 
1649  6p 

Y 

Lilbume,  John,  c.  1614-1657 

Trvall  of  Lieut.  Colonell  T.  Lilburne;  at 
the  Guild-Hall  of  London,  Octob.  1649 
.  .  .    [Southwark?    16491    166p 

NY 

In  Howell's  State  trials,  5:443.  Lilhurno 
was  tried  on  the  charge  of  "seditious  and 
scandalous  practises  against  the  state."  but  was 
acquitted. 


Prynne,  William,   1600-1669 

Mr  William  Prynn,  his  defence  of  stage- 
plays;  or,  A  retractation  of  a  former 
book  of  his  called  Histrio-mastix. 
London  1649:  reprinted  London  1822 
and  Greenwich,  Conn.,  Literary  col- 
lector press  1905  6p 
TS 

For  Historia  Matrix  Prynn  was  convicted. 
First  printed  in  London  in  1649.  Reprinted 
in  1822.  It  is  said  that  Prynne  denounced 
this  as  a  forgery.  For  account  of  his  prosecu- 
tion see  Schroeder,  T.  "Constitutional  free 
speech." 

Rutherford,  Samuel,  1600?-1661 

Free  disputation  against  pretended  lib- 
erty of  conscience,  tending  to  resolve 
the  doubts  moved  by  Mr  Jo.  Good- 
win, Jo.  Baptist,  Dr  Jer.  Taylor,  the 
Belgick  Armenians,  Socinians,  etc.  con- 
tending for  lawless  liberty,  or  licen- 
tious toleration  of  sects  and  heresies. 
London    1649 

Testimony-bearing  exemplified,  a  collec- 
tion containing:  L  Gillespie  against  as- 
sociation with  malignants  .  .  .  165;  IT. 
The  informatory  vindication;  to  which 
is  subjoined  a  collection  of  excellent 
laws,  (or  eschol  grapes)  in  favor  of 
our  covenanted  reformation;  to  which 
is  added:  A  declaration  of  the  assembly, 
July  ult.  1648,  concerning  the  present 
danger  of  religion;  also:  A  seasonable 
warning  concerning  the  present  im- 
minent dangers,  and  duties  relating 
thereto  by  the  assembly,  July  27,  1649 
.  .  .  Paisley,  Printed  by  John  Neilson 
for  the  publishers  472p 

Warr,   John 

Privileges  of  the  people;  or.  Principles 
of  common  right  and  freedome,  briefely 
laid  open  and  asserted  in  two  chap- 
ters: 1.  containing  the  distinct  interests 
of  king,  Parliament  and  people,  con- 
sisting in  prerogative,  privilege  and  lib- 
erty; 2,  discovering  the  people's  right 
in  choice,  change  or  regulation  of  gov- 
ernments or  governours,  propounded 
to  the  consideration  of  the  people  of 
Fncrland.    London    1649    Up 

1650-1660 

Eaton.  Samuel 

Oath  of  allegiance  and  the  nntional  cove- 
nant proved  to  be  non-obliging.  1650 
56p 

Fry,  John 

Clergy  in  their  colors;  or.  A  brief  char- 
acter of  them;  written  with  a  hearty 
desire  of  their  reformation  and  great 
zeal  to  my  countrymen,  that  they  may 
no  longer  be  deceived  by  such  as  call 
themselves  ministers  of  the  gospel,  but 
are  not.  London    1650  60p 

Vindication  of  the  oath  of  allegiance,  in 
answer  to  a  paper  disperst  by  Mr  Sam 
Eaton  wherein  his  propositions  are 
exainined  and  confuted.  Secretlv  printed 
1650  48p 


8 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Clarke,   Samuel,    1599-1682 

General  martyrology;  or,  A  history  of 
all  the  great  persecutions  that  have 
been  in  the  world  to  this  time;  to- 
gether with  the  lives  of  many  eminent 
divines.  [London]  Printed  by  Thomas 
Underbill   1651 

Graunt,  John 

Truth's  defender  and  error's  reprover; 
or,  A  briefe  discoverie  of  feined  Pres- 
byterie,  dilated  and  unfolded  in  3  dis- 
tinct chapters  .  .  .  and  also  Capt.  Nor- 
wood's declaration  proved  an  abnega- 
tion of  Christ.   London   1651 

Hall,  John 

Gagg  to  Love's  Advocate,  or  an  assertion 
of  the  justice  of  Parliament  in  the 
execution  of  Mr  Love.  1651 

Hobbes,   Thomas,    1588-1679 

Leviathan;  or,  The  commonwealth  eccles- 
iastical and  civil.  London,  Andrew 
Crooke,  at  the  Green  Dragon  in  St 
Paul's  churchyard  1651 

Norwood,  Robert 

Brief  discourse  made  by  Captain  R.  Nor- 
wood in  the  Upper-bench  court  at 
Westminster;  with  some  argument  by 
him  then  given,  in  defence  of  himself, 
and  prosecution  of  a  writ  of  error  by 
him  brought  upon  an  indictment  found 
and  adjudged  against  him  upon  an  act 
against  blasphemy,  at  the  Sessions  in 
Old  Bayley,  Jan.  28,  1651.  London  1652 
Case  and  trial  of  Captain  R.  Norwood 
.  .  .  truly  .  .  .  stated;  together  with 
some  observations  upon  the  law  and 
its  professors.  [London  1651] 

For  abstract  of  Norwood's  case  see;  Scliroeder, 
T.      Constitutional    free    speech,    P267-69. 

[Williams,   Roger]    ca    1606-1683 

Bloudy  tenent  yet  more  bloudy  .  .  .  Lon- 
don,  Printed   for   G.    Calvert    1652   320p 

Y 

— Same;  edited  S.  L.  Caldwell.  (Reprint  in 
Narragansett  club.  Providence.  Public- 
ations,   Providence,    R.L    1870   v   4) 

Y 

(ed.)  Fourth  paper  presented  by  Major 
Butler  [to  the  Honourable  committee 
of  Parliament,  for  the  propagating  the 
Gospel  of  Christ  Jesus]  with  other 
papers  edited  and  published  by  Roger 
Williams  in  London,  1652;  with  an 
introduction  and  notes  by  Clarence 
Saunders  Brigham.  Providence,  R.L, 
Club  for  colonial  reprints  1903  xxiii,  [6] 
49p 

B   NY  Y 

Lieutenant  Col  John  Lilburne  tried  and 
cast,  or,  His  case  and  craft  discovered. 
(From:  Howells.  State  trials.  5:443 
1653) 

Prynne,  William,   1600-1669 

Sword  of  Christian  magistracy  supported; 
or,  A  vindication  of  the  Christian  mag- 
istrates authority  under  the  Gospell  to 


punish  idolatry,  apostacy,  heresie,  blas- 
phemy and  obstinate  schism,  with  cor^ 
porall,  and  in  some  cases  capitall  pun- 
ishments.  London    1653   I77p 

During    the    revolution    Prynne    the    exconvict 
became   prosecutor. 

HCL 

Raynaud,  Theophile,  1587-1663 

.  .  .  Erotemata  de  malis  ac  bonis  libris, 
deque  iusta  aut  iniusta,  eorumden  con- 
fixione;  cum  indicibus  necessariis.  Lug- 
duni,  sumptibus  loan.  Antonii  Hugue- 
tan  &  Marci  Antonii  Rauaud  1653  378, 
[21]p 

LC 

Biddle,  John,  1615-1662 

Two  letters  of  Mr  John  Biddle  late  pris- 
oner in  Newgate,  now  hurried  away 
to  some  remote  island;  one  to  the 
Lord  Protector,  the  other  to  the  Lord 
President    Lawrence.    London    1655 

For   report   of   trial    see:    Schroeder,    T.      Con- 
stitutional  free   speech,   P26S-69. 

Clasen,  Daniel 

De  religione  politica  liber  unus.  Magde- 
borgi,  A/foller  1655  8,538p 

B 

Cotton,  John,  1585-1652 

Civil  magistrates  power  in  matters  of 
religion.  London  1655 

Spirit  of  persecution  again  broken  loose, 
by  an  attempt  to  put  in  execution 
against  Mr  J.  Biddle  an  abrogated  or- 
dinance of  the  Lords  and  Commons  for 
punishing  blasphemies  and  heresies; 
together  with  a  full  narrative  of 
the  whole  proceedings  upon  that 
ordinance  against  the  said  Mr  J.  B. 
and  Mr  W.  Kiffen.     London   1655 

Whitehead,    George,    of    Orton 

Path  of  the  just  cleared,  and  cruelty  and 
tyranny  laid  open,  or  a  few  words  to 
you  priests  and  magistrates  of  this  na- 
tion, wherein  your  oppression  and  tyr- 
anny is  laid  open,  also  the  ground  and 
cause  of  the  imprisonment  of  George 
Whitehead  and  John  Harwood,  who 
are  sufferers  for  the  innocent  truths 
sake  in  the  goal  of  Bury  in  Suffolk. 
London  1655  26p 

Whitehead,   John 

Enmitie  between  the  two  seeds,  wherein 
is  discovered  the  subtilty  and  envie  of 
the  serpent's  seed;  also  a  Declaration 
of  the  ground  and  manner  of  my  im- 
prisonment and  of  the  imprisonment  of 
Marmaduke  Storr,  who  is  my  compan- 
ion in  bonds  for  the  truth's  sake  in 
Northampton  gaol.  1655  33p 
Fox,  George 

Declaration  of  the  ground  of  error  and 
errors,  blasphemy,  blasphemers,  etc., 
and  the  ground  of  enchantings  and 
seducing   spirits.    1657 

Erbery,  William,   1604-1654 

Testimony  of  W.  E.  left  upon  record 
for  the  saints  of  succeeding  ages;  being 
a  collection  of  the  writings  of  the 
aforesaid     author     .  .  .     whereunto     is 


FREE  SPEECH 


added  The  honest  heretic,  being  his 
trial  at  Westminster,  a  piece  never 
printed  before.   London    1658 

Reported  in  Schroeder,  T.     Constitutional  free 
speech,    P270-71. 

Morland,  Sir  Samuel,  1625-1693 

History  of  the  evangelical  churches  of 
the  valleys  of  the  Peidmont,  with  a 
most  naked  and  punctual  relation  of 
the  late  bloudy  massacre,  1655.  Lon- 
don 1658 

Basire,  Isaac 

History  of  the  English  and  Scotch  pres- 
bytery: wherein  is  discovered  their  de- 
signcs  and  practices  for  the  subversion 
of  government  in  church  and  state, 
written  in  French,  tr.  bv  AL  Playford. 
(Secretly)  Printed  in  Villa  Franca  1659 

Clarke,  Samuel,  1675-1729 

(comp.)  Golden  apples;  or,  Seasonable 
and  serious  counsel  from  the  sanctuary 
to  the  rulers  of  the  earth,  held  forth 
in  the  resolution  of  sundry  questions, 
and  cases  of  conscience  about  divi- 
sions, schisms,  heresies  and  the  toller- 
ation  of  them;  collected  out  of  the 
writings  of  the  most  orthodox  and 
judicious  divines,  both  Presbyterians 
and  Independents.  London,  Underbill 
1659  30,  210p 

B 

Needham  [Nedham]  Marchamont,  1620- 
1678 
Interest  will  not  lie;  or,  A  view  of  Eng- 
land's true  interest  in  reference  to  the 
Papist,  Royalist,  Presbyterian,  Baptist, 
Neuter,  army.  Parliament,  city  of  Lon- 
don in  reference. of  a  treasonable  pam- 
phlet, cntituled  The  interest  of  Eng- 
land  stated.   1659 

Norton,   John,    1606-1663 

Heart  of  New  England  rent  at  the  blas- 
phemies    of     the     present     generation. 
Cambridge   1659 
Y 

[Plockhoy,  Pieter  Corneliszoon]  fl.  1659 
Way  to  the  peace  and  settlement  of  these 
nations,  fully  discovered  in  two  letters, 
delivered  to  His  late  Highnesse,  and 
one  to  the  present  Parliament,  as  also 
one  to  His  Highnesse  Richard  lord 
protector,  of  England,  Scotland  and 
Ireland,  etc.;  wherein  the  liberty  of 
speaking  (which  everyone  desires  for 
himselfe)  is  opposed  against  Antichrist, 
for  the  procuring  of  his  downfall,  who 
will  not  gain  the  same  to  others  .  .  . 
By  Peter  Cornelius,  van  Zurick-Zee, 
a  lover  of  truth  and  peace.  London, 
Printed   for   D.   White    1659  30p 

1660-1670 
Bagshaw,  Edward 

Great  question  concerning  things  indif- 
ferent in  religious  worship.  3d  ed  Lon- 
don  1660   16p 


Moore,   Henry 

An  explanation  of  the  grand  mystery  of 
Godliness;  or,  A  true  and  faithfull  rep- 
resentation of  the  everlasting  gospel  of 
our  lord  and  savior  Jesus  Christ,  the 
only  begotten  son  of  God  and  sovereign 
over  men  and  angels.  London,  J. 
Flesher  1660  464p 

Book  10  Chapters  X,  XI,  XII,  contain  a  few 
good  declarations  for  freedom  which  however 
are  all  explained  away  in  the  detailed  discus- 
sion. 

Perrot,  John,  of  Ireland 

John,  to  all  God's  imprisoned  people  for 
his  names-sake,  wheresoever  upon  the 
face  of  the  earth,  salutation  (written 
from  Rome  prison  of  madmen,  the  2nd 
day  of  the  8th  month,  1660).  London, 
Thomas  Simmons   1660  8p 

This  author  went  to  Rome  to  convert  the 
Pope  and  was  imprisoned  in  a  madhouse.  He 
returned  to  England  and  afterwards  went  to 
America. 

Taylor,   Jeremy,    1613-1667 

Ductor  dubitantium;  or.  The  rule  of  con- 
science in  all  her  general  measures, 
serving  as  a  great  instrument  for  the 
determination  of  cases  of  conscience. 
London,   R.   Royston   1660  xl,559p 

NY 

Treason  arraigned  in  answer  to  Plain  Eng- 
lish; being  a  trayterous  and  phanatique 
pamphlet  which  was  condemned  by  the 
counsel  of  state,  suppressed  by  author- 
ity; and  the  printer  declared  against 
by  proclamation.  It  is  directed  to  the 
Lord  General  Monck,  and  officers  of 
his   army.    London    1660    r31]p 

NY  Y 

Bagshaw,   Edward 

Second  part  of  the  great  question  con- 
cerning indifferent  things  in  religious 
worship  .  .  .   London   1661 

Bishop,  George,  d.   1668 

New  England  judged,  not  by  man's  but 
by  the  spirit  of  the  Lord;  and  the 
summe  sealed  up  in  New  England's 
persecutions:  being  a  brief  relation  of 
the  sufferings  of  the  people  called 
Quakers  in  these  parts.  London,  R. 
Wilson  1661   174p 

NY 

Crook,    John,    1617-1699,    and    others 

Liberty  of  conscience  asserted,  and  sev- 
eral reasons  rendered,  why  no  outward 
force,  nor  imposition,  ought  to  be  used 
in  matters  of  faith  and  religion;  with 
several  sayings,  collected  from  the 
speeches  and  writings  of  King  James 
and  King  Charles  the  first.  John  Crook, 
Samuel  Fisher,  Francis  Howgill,  Rich- 
ard Hubbcrthorne.  London,  Printed  for 
Robert   Wilson   1661   8p 

B 

Dury,  John 

Discourse  respecting  the  liberty  of  con- 
science that  is  practised  in  certain 
parts.  London  1661  (Appended  to  Pett, 
Sir  Peter.  Discourse  concerning  lib- 
erty of  conscience,  p  87-112)    1661 

HCL  LC 


10 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


L'Estrange,   Roger,    1616-1704 

Interest  mistaken:  or,  The  Holy  Cheat, 
proving  from  the  undeniable  i^ractices 
and  positions  of  the  Presbyterians  that 
the  design  of  tliat  party  is  to  enslave 
both  king  and  people  under  the  masque 
of   religion.    1661 

Penington,    Isaac 

Concerning  persecution  which  is  the  af- 
flicting or  punishing  that  which  is 
good  under  pretence  of  its  being  evil, 
with  a  brief  account  of  that  supposed 
stubbornes  which  by  many  is  objected 
against  the  people  called  Quakers.  1661 
31p 

Pett,  Six  Peter 

Discourse  concerning  liberty  of  con- 
science. London   1661 

HCL 

Smith,  William,  of  Besthorp 

Cause  plainly  showed  of  the  persecution 
which  is  now  upon  the  innocent  people 
called  Quakers,  and  here  is  also  a  true 
declaration  of  their  just  and  honest 
intentions,  and  in  this  all  moderate 
people  may  see  the  ground  of  their 
sufferings.  1661  14p 

Sturgion,  John 

Plea  for  toleration  of  opinions  and  per- 
suasions in  matters  of  religion,  differing 
from  the  Church  of  England,  London, 
1661.  (In:  Underbill,  E.  B..  ed.  Tracts 
on  liberty  of  conscience  and  persecu- 
tion,   1614-1661.   p309-41.    London) 

B  Y 

Baker,  Sir  Richard,  1568-1645 

Theatrum  redivivuni;  or,  The  theatre 
vindicated  by  Sir  Richard  Barer  [!]; 
in  answer  to  Mr  Pryn's  Histrio-mastix: 
wherein  his  groundless  assertions 
against  stage-plays  are  discovered,  his 
misstaken  allegations  of  the  Fathers 
manifested,  as  also  what  he  calls  his 
reasons,  to  be  nothing  but  his  passions 
.  .  .  London,  Printed  by  T.  R.  for  F. 
Eglesf^eld  1662  141p 
LC  Y 

Contra  libellium  Calvini  in  quo  ostendere 
conatur  haereticos  jure  gladij  coercen- 
dos   esse.   n.p.    1662 

HCL 

Foulis,    Henry,    1638P-1685 

History  of  the  wicked  plots  and  conspira- 
cies of  our  pretended  saints,  the  begin- 
nings, designs,  etc.,  of  the  Jesuite,  with 
the  conspiracies,  rebellions,  schisms, 
hypocrisie,  perjury,  sacriledge,  sedi- 
tions, and  vilifying  humour  of  some 
Presbyterians  proved  by  authentick  ex- 
amples, as  they  have  been  acted  in 
Great   Britain.    London    1662 

—Same.  2d  ed  Oxford  1674 

Zwicker,   Daniel 

Henoticum  christianorum;  seu,  Disputa- 
tiones  Mini  Celsi  Senensis:  Quatenus 
in  haereticis  coercendis  progredi  liceat? 
Cemmata   potissima.   Amsterdam    1662 

HCL 


Bellamy,  Thomas  i.e.    [Sir  Henry  Janson] 

Philanax  /Xnglicus,  or  a  Christian  caveat 
for  all  kings,  princes  and  prelates,  how 
they  entrust  a  sort  of  pretended  Protes- 
tants of  integrity,  or  suffer  tliem  to 
commix  with  their  respective  govern- 
ments, shewing  plainly  .  .  .  that  it  is 
impossible  to  be  at  the  same  time 
Presbyterians  and  not  rebells.  London 
1663 

Compleat  collection  of  farewell  sermons, 
preached  by  London  and  contrie  min- 
isters, August  17,  1662,  with  their  sev- 
eral  prayers.   London    1663 

The  Act  of  Uniformity  was  passed  in  1662. 
Its  enforcement  on  Aug.  24th,  1662,  termed 
Black  Bartholomew's  day,  caused  upwards  of 
2000   ministers  to  leave  the  Church   of   England. 

G.,  B. 

Proposal    humbly    offered    for    the    form- 
ing  of   liberty   of   conscience.    London? 
1663    16p 
B   Y 

L'Estrange,  Sir  Roger,  1616-1704 

Considerations  ...  in  order  to  the  regu- 
lation of  the  press:  together  with  di- 
verse instances  of  treasonous  and  sedi- 
tious pamphlets,  proving  the  necessity 
thereof.  London,  Printed  by  A.  C.  1663 
(IS),  33p 
This   author   was   once   official   censor. 

B   NY 

Billing,  Edward 

Faithful  testimony  for  God  and  my  coun- 
try; or,  A  retro-spective  glass  for  the 
legislators  and  the  rest  of  the  sons  of 
the  Church  of  England  (so-called), 
who  are  found  persecuting  the  inno- 
cent. [Anon]  London,  Printed  for  the 
author  1664  12p 

B 

Prynne,  William,  1600-1669 

Records:  an  exact  chronological  and 
historical  demonstration  of  our  Brit- 
ish, Roman,  Saxon,  Danish,  Norman, 
English  kings  supreme  ecclesiastical 
jurisdiction  in  and  over  all  spiritual  or 
religious  affairs.   3v   1666,   1665,   &   1670 

Bourbon,  Armand  de,  prince  de  Conti 

Traite    de    la    comedie    et    dcs    spectacles, 
selon   la   tradition   de   I'eglise,   tiree   des 
conciles  &  des  saints  percs.   Paris,  Bil- 
laine   1667  140,   108p 
B 

Looking-glass  for  England,  being  an  ab- 
stract of  the  Bloody  massacre  in  Ire- 
land, executed  by  Irish  Papists  upon 
English  Protestants.  1642;  also  a  Brief 
apology  for  the  Protestants  in  the  val- 
leys of  Piedmont,  with  a  narrative  of 
the  barbarous  butcheries  .  .  .  perpe- 
trated on  them  by  the  Popish  party 
.  .  .  April,  1655.  London.  (Secretly) 
printed  in  the  year  1667  30p 

[Owen,  John,    1616-1683] 

Indulgence  and  toleration  considered. 
Not  published   1667  31p 


FREE  SPEECH 


11 


Peace-oflfering  in  an  apology  and  humble 
plea  for  indulgence  and  libcrtie  of  con- 
science; by  sundry  Protestants  differing 
in  some  things  from  the  present  estab- 
lishment about  the  worship  of  God. 
London  1667  41p 
B 

[Perrinchief,   Richard] 

Indulgence  not  justified  ...  in  answer 
to  the  arguments  of  a  late  book,  A 
peace-ofTering,  or  plea  for  indulgence, 
[by  John  Owen]  and  to  the  cavils  of 
another,  call'd.  The  second  discourse 
of  the  religion  in  England  [by  John 
Corbet.]    n.p.,  n.d.   [1667?]   51p 

Tomkins,  Thomas 

Inconveniences  of  toleration;  or,  An 
answer  to  [David  Jenkins']  Proposition 
to  the  king  .  .  .  for  the  safety  and  hap- 
piness of  the  king  and  kingdom.  Not 
published  1667  40p 

Liberty  of  conscience  upon  its  true  and 
proper  grounds  asserted  &  vindicated; 
proving,  that  no  prince,  nor  state, 
ought  by  force  to  compel  men  to  any 
part  of  the  doctrine,  worship  or  disci- 
pline of  the  Gospel;  to  which  is  added, 
the  second  part;  viz.  Liberty  of  con- 
science, the  magistrates  interest  ...  by 
a  Protestant  .  .  .  London,  Printed  in 
the  year  1668  2d  ed  corrected  by  the 
author,  with  some  addition  70p 

TS 

Argues  from  "Light  and  law  of  nature"  and 
''laws  of  the  Gospel,"  and  that  liberty  is  to  the 
interest    of    kingdoms. 

Prynne,  VVilliam,   1600-1669 

Brief  animadversions  on,  amendments  of 
and  additional  explanatory  record  to 
the  fourth  part  of  the  Institutes  of  the 
laws  of  England  concerning  the  juris- 
diction of  courts,  compiled  by  Sir  Ed- 
ward Cooke.   London    1669 

[Owen,  John]    1616-1683 

Truth  and  innocence  vindicated:  in  a  sur- 
vey of  a  discourse  concerning  ecclesias- 
tical polity;  and  the  authority  of  the 
civil  magistrate  over  the  consciences 
of  subjects  in  matters  of  religion. 
[Anon]    London    1669   410p 

B  TS  Y 

[Stewart,  Sir  James  of  Goodtrees] 

Jus  populi  vindicatum;  or.  The  peoples 
right  to  defend  themselves  and  their 
covenanted  religion,  vindicated;  where- 
in the  Act  .  .  .  which  was  interprised 
anno  1660  is  particularly  justified  .  .  . 
a  full  reply  to  the  first  part  of  the 
Survey  of  Naphtaly,  etc.  [by  Hony- 
man.]    Privately  printed,  n.p.  1669 


1670-1680 

Hubberthorne,    R[ichard?],    Fisher,    S[am- 
uel?],   Howgill,  F[rancis?] 
Persecution    inconsistent    with    Christian- 


ity, humane   society  and   the   honor   of 
princes.  3d  ed  1670  30p 

Third  edition  with  large  additions  on  "Lib- 
erty of  conscience  asserted."  First  published 
in    i66i. 

Parker,  Samuel,  bishop  of  Oxford,  1640- 
1687 
Discourse  of  ecclesiastical  politic  .  .  . 
the  mischiefs  and  inconveniences  of 
toleration  are  represented,  and  all  pre- 
tenses pleaded  in  behalf  of  liberty  of 
conscience  are  fully  answered.  London, 
J.   Martyn    1670  lvi,326p 

TS 

Penn,   William,    1644-1718 

Great  case  of  liberty  of  conscience  once 
more  briefly  debated  and  defended,  by 
the  authority  of  reason.  Scripture  and 
antiquity;  which  may  serve  the  place 
of  a  general  reply  to  such  late  dis- 
courses, as  have  oppos'd  a  tolleration. 
[London]   1670  55p 

B  Y 

—and  Mead,  VVilUam,  1628-1713 

People's  ancient  and  just  liberties  as- 
serted in  the  trial  of  William  Penn 
and  William  Mead  at  the  Sessions  held 
at  the  Old  Bailey,  in  London,  on  1st, 
3d,  4th  and  5th  of  September,  1670  .  .  . 
Sheffield,   J.    Crome    1794  vi,23p 

NY  Y 

— Same;  with  An  answer  to  the  seditious 
and  scandalous  pamphlet,  entituled, 
"The  Tryal  of  Wm.  Penn  and  Wm. 
Mead,"  etc.,  1671.  1670-1671 

Second  part  of  the  people's  (ancient  and 
just)  liberties  asserted  in  the  tryals 
of  Tho.  Rudyard,  F.  Moor,  R.  Mew, 
R.  Mayfield,  R.  Knowlman,  G.  Hutton, 
J.  Boulton,  R.  Thornton,  C.  Banister, 
J.  Boulton  and  W.  Bayley  at  the  Old 
Bailey,  wherein  their  oppression  and 
injustice  are  manifested.  Secretly 
printed    1670    68p 

Stubs,  John,  of  Bishoprick 

For  the  king  and  both  houses  of  Parlia- 
ment who  are  desired  to  read  .  .  .  this 
treatise  .  .  .  and  in  tender  bowels  of 
compassion  to  repair  the  great  breaches 
that  arc  made  all  over  the  nation  .  .  . 
[London?]   Pr.  in  1670  19p 

B 

Vincent,    Nathaniel 

Covert  from  the  storm,  or  the  fearful 
encouraged  in  times  of  suffering.  Lon- 
don   (secretly)    1671    142p 

The  author  endured  great  persecution  for 
preaching,  and  was,  in  1670,  imprisoned  for 
six  raontis  in  the  Marshalsea  and  the  Gate- 
house. The  above  work  was  written  during 
his  confinement. 

WUd,   Robert 

Letter  to  his  friend  Mr  J.  J.,  upon  oc- 
casion of  His  Majesty's  Declaration 
for  liberty  of  conscience;  together  with 
his  Poetica  liccntia,  and  a  Friendly  de- 
bate between  a  conformist  and  a  non- 
conformist. London,  T.  Parkhurst  1672 


12 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Controversial  letters,  or,  The  Grand  Con- 
troversie,  concerning  the  pretended 
temporal  authority  of  popes  over  the 
whole  earth,  and  the  true  sovereign 
of  kings  within  their  own  respective 
kingdoms.  Between  two  English  gentle- 
men, the  one  of  the  Church  of  Eng- 
land: the  other  of  the  Church  of  Rome. 
The  first  two  letters.  London,  Printed 
for  H.  Brome  &  B.  Tooke  1673  46p 

— Same.  2d  ed  London,  Printed  for  H. 
Brome  &  B.  Tooke  1674  46p 

TS 

A  thoro  and  ingenious  discussion  of  the 
subject  of  papal  supremacy  and  its  alleged  im- 
plied   treasonable    nature. 

There  are  sixteen  of  these  letters  in  all. 
The  later  ones  are  listed  in  their  chronological 
place. 

Third  and  fourth  of  the  controversial  let- 
ters .  .  .  London,  Printed  for  H.  Brome 
B.  Tooke   1673  37p 

TS 

Fifth  and  sixth  of  the  controversial  let- 
ters .  .  .  London,  Printed  for  H.  Brome 
&  B.  Tooke   1673  37p 

TS 

MUton,   John,    1608-1674 

Of  true  religion,  heresy,  schism,  tolera- 
tion, and  what  best  means  may  be  used 
against  the  growth  of  popery.  London 
1673 

Seventh  and  eighth  of  the  controversial 
letters  .  .  .  London,  Printed  for  H;. 
Brome  &  B.  Tooke  1673  54p 

TS 

Ninth  and  tenth  of  the  controversial 
letters  .  .  .  London,  Printed  for  H. 
Brome   &  B.   Tooke   1674  46p 

TS 

Eleventh  and  twelfth  of  the  controversial 
letters  .  .  .  London,  Printed  for  H, 
Brome  &  B.  Tooke  1674  46p 

TS 

Penn,  William,  1644-1718 

England's  present  interest  discovered 
with  honour  to  the  prince  and  safety 
to  the  people  .  .  .  [London]  1675  6, 
[32]    7-30p 

B  NY 

Ross,  Alexander,  1590-1664 

irANSEBEIA;  or,  A  view  of  all  religions 
in  the  world,  with  the  several  church- 
governments,  from  the  creation  to 
these  times.  Also  a  discovery  of  all 
known  heresies  in  all  ages  and  places: 
And  choice  observations  and  reflections 
throughout  the  whole.  Fifth  edition 
enlarged  and  prefaced  by  Alexander 
Ross,  to  which  is  annexed,  the  lives, 
actions  and  ends  of  certain  notorious 
heretics,  with  their  effegies  in  copper 
plates.  London,  John  Williams  1675 

_  A  scholarly  treatise  which  on  pages  501-510 
Rives  fine  brief  statement  of  divine  right  gov- 
ernments' justification  for  intolerance,  with  an 
historical  review  covering  a  large  scope  of  world 
history. 


Thirteenth  and  fourteenth  of  the  controver- 
sial letters  .  .  .   1675  70p 

TS 

Clarendon,  Edward,  earl  of 

Brief  view  and  survey  of  the  dangerous 
and  pernicious  errors  to  church  and 
state,  in  Mr  Hobbes's  book,  entitled 
"Leviathan."  Oxford,  Printed  at  the 
Theater  1676 

Muggleton,  Lodowick,  1609-1697 

The    neck  of  the  Quakers  broken.     1676? 

Pages     18,    31     and    54    were    held    to    contain 

blasphemous     matter.       Muggleton     convicted     in 

1676.      He   claimed  the   book   had  been   published 

13    years    before. 

News  from  the  sessions-house  in  the  Old 
Bayley;  being  a  true  account  of  the  no- 
torious principles  and  wicked  practices 
of  the  grand  imposter  Lodowick  Mug- 
gleton, who  has  the  impudence  to  style 
himself  one  of  the  two  last  coinmis- 
sioned  witnesses  and  prophets  of  the 
most  high  God  Jesus  Christ.  Collected 
out  of  his  own  writings,  for  which 
damnable  heresies  being  bound  over, 
he  made  his  appearance  at  the  ses- 
sions this  14th  of  December,  and  gave 
such  security  in  order  to  his  future 
trials  .  .  .   London  1676 

Muggleton,  Lodowick,   1609-1697 

True  narrative  of  the  proceedings  at  the 
sessions-house  in  the  Old  Bayley,  at  a 
sessions  there  held  on  Wednesday  the 
17th  of  January  1676/7;  giving  a  full 
account  of  the  true  trial  and  sentence 
of  Lodowick  Muggleton  for  blasphe- 
mous words  and  books.  London  1676/7 
For  report  of  his  several  convictions  see: 
Schroeder,  T.  Constitutional  free  speech,  p286- 
94. 

Ataxiae  obstaculum;  an  answer  to  certain 
queries  .  .  .  entitled  Queries  proposed 
to  the  serious  consideration  of  those 
who  impose  upon  others  in  things  of 
divine  and  supernatural  revelation. 
London  1677 

Spotswood,  J. 

History  of  the  church  and  state  of  Scot- 
land, beginning  the  Year  of  our  Lord 
203,  and  continued  to  the  end  of  the 
reign  of  King  James  the  VL,  of  ever 
blessed   memory,   in   seven   books.    1677 

Coleman,  Ed 

For  conspiring  the  death  of  the  king 
(1678).  3v  Reprinted  Edinburgh  1888 

Collection  of  twenty-eight  folio  pamphlets, 
consisting  of  trials  for  conspiracy  to 
murder  the  king,  the  subversion  of  the 
government  and  Protestant  religion; 
articles  of  impeachment,  speeches,  col- 
lection of  letters,  etc  ,  relating  to  the 
horrid  popish  plot,  from  the  originals 
in  the  hands  of  George  Treby.  1678 

L'Estrange,  Sir  Roger,  1616-1704 

Account  of  the  growth  of  knavery  under 
pretended  fears  of  arbitrary  govern- 
ment; with  a  parallel  betwixt  the  re- 
formers of  1677  and  1641.  (London 
1678) 
This    author   was   official    censor. 


FREE  SPEECH 


13 


Nalson,  John 

The  countermine,  or  a  short  but  true 
discovery  of  the  dangerous  principles 
and  secret  practices  of  the  dissenting 
party,  especially  the  Presbyterians, 
showing  that  religion  is  pretended,  but 
rebellion  is  intended,  &c.  3d  ed  1678 

News  from  Newgate;  or,  the  female  Mug- 
gletonian,  being  an  account  of  the  ap- 
prehension and  commitment  of  a  cer- 
tain fanatical  woman,  charged  with 
speaking  several  horrid  blasphemous 
words;  taken  at  Stepney  the  29th  of 
May,  1678  .  .  .  London,  Printed  for  P. 
B.   1678  8p 

For  abstract  see.  Schrocdcr,  T.  Constitutional 
free   speech,   P295-97. 

Staley,   William 

Trial  "for  speaking  treasonable  words 
against  His  Most  Sacred  Majesty" 
etc.   London   1678 

Sentence — "Drawn    and    quartered." 

Beverlandus,   Hadrianus 

Dc    peccatum    originale.    Utrecht?    1679 
This    work    was    ordered    to    be    burned,    the 
author    being    fined    by    the    University    of    Ley- 
den    and    afterwards    banished    from    Utrecht    on 
account   of   the   obscenity   of   his   writings. 

Blount,  Charles,   1654-1693 

Just  vindication  of  learning;  or.  An 
humble  address  to  the  high  court  of 
Parliament  in  behalf  of  the  liberty  of 
the  press,  bv  Philopatris  [pseud.]  .  .  . 
London   1679  18p 

LC 

Convicted  for  blasphemy  in  1693.  See: 
Schroeder,  T.  Constitutional  free  speech,  P306- 
8. 

Brydall,  John,  b.   1635 

Decus  &  tutamen,  or  a  prospect  of  laws 
of  England,  purposely  framed  for  the 
safeguard  of  the  King's  Majesty,  his 
sacred  person,  crown  and  dignity 
against  all  traitorous  speeches,  designs 
and  conspiracies;  to  which  are  added 
peculiar  notes  upon  the  judgment  in 
high  treason  fit  for  all  His  Majestie's 
subjects  and  liege  people  to  be  ac- 
quainted wath  all.  London,  George 
Dawes  1679 
Fifteenth  and  sixteenth  of  the  controversial 
letters  .  .  .  London,  Printed  for  H. 
Brome  &  B.  Tooke  1679  69p 
TS 
HoUis,    [Lord] 

Letter  .  .  .  shewing  that  the  bishops  are 
not  to  be  judges  in  Parliament  in  cases 
capital,  n.p.  1679 
True  narrative  of  the  proceedings  at  the 
sessions  for  London  and  Middlesex 
begun  April  30th,  1679,  giving  an  ac- 
count of  the  tryal  of  a  popish  priest 
condemned  for  high  treason  .  .  .  Lon- 
don 1679 
Usher,  J. 

Episcopal  and  presbyterial  government 
conjoyned,  proposed  as  an  expedient 
for  the  compromising  of  the  differ- 
ences and  preventing  of  those  troubles 
about    church    government.    1679    14p 


1680-1690 

Blair,  Robert,  1593-1666 

Life  of  Mr  William  Blair,  minister  of  St 
Andrews,  containing  his  autobiography 
from  1593-1636,  with  supplement  to  his 
life,  and  continuation  of  the  history  of 
the  times  to  1680,  by  his  son-in-law, 
Mr  William  Row,  minister  of  Ceres; 
ed.  for  the  Woodrow  society  from  the 
original  manuscript  by  Thomas  M'Crie 
D.D.  Edinburgh.  Printed  for  the  Wood- 
row   society   1848 

Contains  brief  historical  accounts  of  very 
many  persecutions  during  the  stormy  period  of 
Scotch   history. 

Cellier,  Elizabeth,  fl.  1680 

Tryal  and  sentence  of  Elizabeth  Cellier; 
for  writing,  printing  and  publishing  a 
scandalous  libel,  called  Malice  defeated 
etc.,  at  the  sessions  in  the  Old  Bailey, 
11th,  13th  of  September,  1680.  London, 
T.  Collins   1680  9-39p 

B 

Hobbes,   Thomas 

Historical    narration    of    heresy    and    the 
punishment    thereof.    London    1680 
W 

L'Estrange,   Sir   Roger,   1616-1704 

The  case  put  .  .  .  and  three  or  four  other 

seditious  libels.  London  1680 
Citt  and  Bumpkin  ...  in  a  dialogue  con- 
cerning religion  and  government.  (Lon- 
don 1680) 
Seasonable  memorial  in  some  historical 
notes  upon  liberties  of  the  presse  and 
pulpit:  with  the  effects  of  popular  peti- 
tions, tumults,  associations,  impostures 
and  disaffected  common  councils  .  .  . 
London,  Printed  for  H.  Brome  1680 
37p 

This   author   was   once   the   official  censor. 

LC  TS  Y 

Smith,    Francis 

Case  of  Francis  Smith,  bookseller.  Lon- 
don 1680  20p 

Sober  and  useful  reflections  upon  a  treatise 
of  Mr  Richard  Baxter's,  stiled  [sac- 
rilegious desertion  of  the  holy  minis- 
try rebuked,  and  tolerated  preaching 
of  the  gospel  vindicated  with  a  most 
serious  preface  to  the  same,  out  of  the 
said  Mr  Baxter  .  .  .  London,  R.  Chis- 
wcll  1680   [83]p 

TS 

[Stillingfleet,  Edward]    1635-1699 

Grand  question  concerning  the  bishop's 
right  to  vote  in  Parliament  in  cases 
capital,  stated  and  argued,  from  the 
Parliament  and  rolls,  and  the  history 
of  former  times,  with  an  enquiry  into 
the  peerage  and  the  three  estates  in 
Parliament.  1680 

Baxter,  Richard,  1615-1691 

Church  history  of  the  government  of 
bishops  and  their  councils  abbreviated; 
including    ...    a    true    account    of    the 


14 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Baxter,   Richard    —Continued 

most  troubling  controversies  and  here- 
sies till  the  reformation  .  .  .  London, 
T.    Simmons    1681    488p 

NY 

Edmund  Calamy  (1671-1732)  made  indexes 
for  this  book,  and  later  brought  the  history 
down  to  the  time  of  William  I.  He  also  pub- 
lished, in  170-',  an  abridgment  of  the  work. 
Calamy  was  a  great  admirer  of  Baxter,  and 
wrote    three    memorials    of    his    life. 

Carr,  Henry,  of  the  parish  of  St  Pulchres, 
London 
Triall  of  Henry  Carr,  gent.,  at  London, 
2d  of  July,  1680;  upon  information  .  .  . 
charging  him  to  be  the  author  of  a 
certain  false,  scandalous  and  malitious 
book  intituled  The  weekly  pacquet  of 
advice  from  Roine;  or,  The  history  of 
popery  .  .  .  ;  also  the  tryal  of  Eliza- 
beth Cellier,  at  the  King's  bench  bar, 
July  11th,  1680,  where  she  was  cleared. 
London.  R.  Taylor  1681  26p 

B 

Briefly  reported  in:  Schroeder,  T.  Constitu- 
tional   free    speech,    P298-99. 

L'Estrange,   Sir  Roger,   1616-1704 

Answer   to   the   appeal   from   the   country 

to  the  town.  (London  1681) 
Toleration  discussed;  in  two  dialogues; 
L  Betwixt  a  Conformist,  and  a  Non- 
conformist; laying  open  the  impiety, 
and  danger  of  a  general  liberty;  H. 
Betwixt  a  Presbyterian,  and  an  Inde- 
pendent; concluding,  upon  an  impar- 
tial examination  of  their  respective 
practices,  and  opinions,  in  favour  of  the 
Independents.  London,  Printed  for  H. 
Brome    1681    164p 

NY 

Liberty  of  conscience  in  its  order  to  uni- 
versal peace,  impartially  stated,  and 
proved  to  be  the  just,  right,  and  gen- 
uine efTect,  of  true  natural,  and  Chris- 
tian religion  .  .  .  London,  Printed  for 
T.  Parkhurst  1681  146p 

Y 

[Bold,  or  Bolde,  Samuel,]    1687-1736 

Sermon  against  persecution,  preached 
March  26,  1682.  Being  ...  the  time 
when  the  brief  for  the  persecuted 
Protestants  in  France  was  read  in  the 
parish  church  of  Shapwicke.  London, 
R.  Janeway  16S2  36p 

Bugg,   F. 

De  Christiana  Hbcrtate;  or,  Liberty  of 
conscience.      London    1682 

Keach,  B[enjamin,  1640-1704] 

Sion  in  distress;  or,  The  groans  of  the 
Protestant  church    [a  poem.]    1682 

Convicted  for  Baptist  propatranda.  Schroeder, 
T.      Constitutional    free    speech,    P282-84. 

L'Estrange,  Sir  Roger,  1616-1704 

Holy  cheat:  proving  Presbyterians  design 
to  enslave  king  and  people  under 
masque  of   religion.    (London   1682) 

Official    censor. 

Thompson,  Nathaniel,  and  others 

Tryal  of  Nathaniel  Thompson,  William 
Pain    and    John    Farwell;    for    writing. 


B 


printing  and  publishing  libels,  reflecting 
upon  the  justice  of  the  nation,  in  the 
proceedings  against  the  murderers  of 
Sir  Edmond-Bury  Godfrey;  added  by 
way  of  appendix  several  affidavits 
[etc.]      London,   T.    Simmons    1682  53p 


Baxter,  Richard,  1615-1691 

Paraphrase  upon  the  New  Testament. 
London    1683 

On  this  book  Baxter  was  convicted,  and  the 
book  suppressed.  Schroeder,  T.  Constitutional 
free    speech,    P302-4. 

Pooley,   William,   of   Addington 

Part  of  the  sufferings  of  Leicestershire 
and  North-Hamptonshirc,  by  inform- 
ers and  priests;  also,  God's  mercies 
testified  unto  man's  cruelty  bore  wit- 
ness against  .  .  .  London,  Printed  in  the 
year   1683    12p 

Hampden,  John 

The  trial  and  conviction  of  John  Hamp- 
den, Esq.,  upon  an  indictment  of  High- 
Misdemeanor,  for  contriving  and  prac- 
tising to  disturb  the  peace  of  our  Sov- 
eraign  Lord  the  King,  and  stirring  up 
sedition  in  this  kingdom.  Before  the 
Right  Honourable  Sir  George  Jeffreys. 
London    1684 

Holland.   Province-Staten 

Renovatie  placact;  de  staten  van  Hol- 
landt  ende  West-Yrieslandt,  alien  den 
genen  .  .  .  [forbidding  the  printing  of 
any  scandalous  libels  .  .  .  's  Graven- 
hage  1684] 
NY 

Navarro,  Gonzalo,  1616-1682 

Discursos  politicos,  y  morales  en  cartas 
apologeticas,  contra  los  que  defienden 
el  uso  de  las  comedias  modernas  que 
se  representan  en  Espana,  en  compar- 
acion  del  teatro  antiguo.  2v  in  1  Mad- 
rid, Imprenta  Real;  por  Mateo  de 
Llanos   1684 

B 

Pettit,  Edward 

Visions  of  government,  wherein  the  anti- 
monarchical  principles  and  practices  of 
all  fanatical  commonwealths-men  and 
Jesuitical  politicians  are  discovered, 
confuted  and  exposed.  1684  248p 

Request  to  the  justices  not  to  make  convic- 
tions without  hearing  the  accusers  and 
the  accused  face  to  face  in  matters 
about    religion.    1684    7p 

Short  answer  to  His  Grace  the  Duke  of 
Buckingham's  paper,  concerning  re- 
ligion, toleration  and  liberty  of  con- 
science. London,  Printed  for  S.  G. 
and  are  to  be  sold  by  R.  Taylor  1685 
36p 

B   NY  Y 

Tillotson,  John,  1630-1694 

Perswasive  to  an  ingenuous  tryal  of 
opinions  in  religion.  London,  Printed 
for  T.  Bassett  1685  57p 


FREE  SPEECH 


15 


Toleration  and  liberty  of  conscience  con- 
sidered, and  proved  impracticable,  im- 
possible, and,  even  in  the  opinion  of 
Dissenters,  sinful  and  unlawful.  Lon- 
don, Printed  for  Thomas  Dring  1685 
5-S6p 

Y 

Penn,  William,   1644-1718 

Perswasive  to  moderation  to  church  dis- 
senters, in  prudence  and  conscience: 
humbly  submitted  to  the  King  and  his 
great  councel,  by  one  of  the  humblest 
and  most  dutiful  of  his  dissenting  sub- 
jects.    1686 

An  eloqent  argument  for  the  repeal  of  the 
Penal  Laws,  following  the  King's  Proclamation 
of  Pardon  to  those  imprisoned  for  conscience 
sake,  whercljy  some  twelve  hundred  Quakers 
regained    their    liberty. 

Burnet.  Gilbert,  1643-1715 

Account  of  the  sentiments  of  the  Prince 
and  Princess  of  Orange,  concerning 
the  repeal  of  the  Test  act  in  England; 
by  which  Papists  were  excluded  from 
holding  civil  and  military  employ- 
ments .  .  .  1687.  (In:  Maseres,  ed.  Oc- 
casional papers.  p497-519  London  1809) 

B 

Chillingworth,  William,  1602-1644 

Mr  Chillingworth's  book  called  the  reli- 
gion of  Protestants,  a  safe  way  to 
salvation,  made  more  generally  useful 
by  omitting  personal  contents,  but  in- 
serting whatsoever  concerns  the  com- 
mon cause  of  Protestants,  or  defends 
the  Church  of  England.  London, 
Printed  for  R.  Chiswell  1687  408p 
NY 

Crell,  Johann,   1590-1633 

De  la  tolerance  dans  la  religion,  ou  de 
la  liberte  de  conscience;  au  roi  de 
France  et  son  conseil.  [Translated  by 
Charles  Le  Cene  from  Vindiciae  pro 
religionis  libertate.  (In:  Le  Cene, 
Charles.  Conversations  sur  diverses 
matieres  de  religion.  p220-87.  Phila- 
delphie    1687) 

B 

James  II,  king  of  England,  1633-1701 

His  Alajestie's  gracious  declaration  to  all 
his  loving  subjects  for  libertv  of  con- 
science. [Dated  April  4,  1687]  [Lon- 
don, Printed  by  C.  Bill   1687]    n.t.p.  4p 

B   Y 

— Same.  [With  a  supplementary  Declara- 
tion, dated  April  24,  1688]  [London, 
1687  (1688)]  4p 

B 

Lactantius,   L.  C.  F. 

Relation  of  the  death  of  the  primitive 
persecutors.      Amsterdam    1687 

Le  Cene,  Charles 

Conversations  sur  diverses  matieres  de 
religion,  ou,  Ton  fait  voir  la  tolerance 
que  les  Chretiens  de  difTerens  sentimens 
doivent  avoir  les  uns  pour  les  autres 
.  .  .  avec  un  Traite  de  la  liberte  de 
conscience.  [Anon]  Philadelphia,  A. 
Amour   1687  287p 


L'Estrange,  Sir  Roger,  1616-1704 

Answer  to  a  letter  to  a  dissenter  upon 
occasion  of  late  Declaration  of  indul- 
gence.    (London   1687) 

Letter  from  a  gentleman  in  the  country,  to 
his  friends  in  London,  upon  the  sub- 
ject of  the  penal  laws  and  tests.  [Lon- 
don?   1687?]    n.t.p.   2p 

B    Y 

Ten  seasonable  queries,  proposed  by  a 
Protestant  that  is  for  liberty  of  con- 
science to  all  persuasions.  [London? 
1687?]    n.t.p.   Broadside 

Burnet,  Gilbert,  1643-1715 

Inquiry  into  the  reasons  for  abrogating 
the  Test  imposed  on  all  members  of 
Parliament.;  offered  by  Sa.  Oxon. 
[Samuel  Parker,  bishop  of  Oxford. 
Anon.]      [London    1688?]    8p 

B  NY  Y 

[Gee,  Edward]  1657-1730 
Letter  to  the  superiors,  (whether  bishops 
or  priests)  which  approve  or  license 
the  popish  books  in  England,  particu- 
larly to  those  of  the  Jesuit  order,  con- 
cerning Lewis  Sabran,  a  Jesuit,  Lon- 
don, W.  Rogers  1688  14p 

NY  Y 

Letter  [Nov.  4,  1687]  writ  of  Mijn  Heer 
Fagel,  to  Mr  J.  Stewart,  advocate;  giv- 
ing an  account  of  thoughts  concern- 
ing the  repeal  of  the  Test  laws.  Am- 
sterdam   1688   8p  ^^ 

Parker,    Samuel,    bishop    of    Oxford,    1640- 
1687 
Reasons  for  abrogating  the  Test  imposed 
upon  all   members  of  Parliament.   1678. 
London,   Bonwicke    1688    131p 
B  Y 

Signed    Sa.    Oxon. 

Lloyd,  William,  bishop  of  Worcester,  1627- 
1717 
Answer  to  [Samuel  Parker]  the  bishop 
of  Oxford's  Reasons  for  abrogating 
the  Test,  impos'd  on  all  members  of 
Parliament:  by  a  person  of  qualitv. 
London  1688  6;  46,  |52]p 

B   Y 

Triomphe  de  la  liberte;  ou,  L'irrevocabilitc 
du  test  et  autres  loix  fondamentales 
des  etats  prouvee  par  le  droit  divin, 
par  le  droit  naturel,  par  le  droit  de  la 
nation,  et  par  la  mort  tragique  de 
Charles  Stuart;  Traduit  de  I'anglois. 
Londres  1688  153p 

B 

Baxter,   Richard,    1615-1691 
Cain  and  Abels  malignity,  that  is  enmity 
to     serious     Godliness     .  .  .     lamented, 
described,   detected,   etc.     London    1689 

Burnet,  Gilbert,  1643-1715 

Collection  of  eighteen  papers,  relating  to 

the  affairs  of  church  and  state,  during 

the    reign    of   King   James   the    Second. 

London,   Reprinted   for  J.   Starkey  and 

R.  Chiswell  1689  244p 
LC 


16 


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op  de  drieven  aen  hem  ghcsonden,  soo 
ghedruckte  als  gheschrevene,  van  den 
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Johnson,  Samuel,  1709-1784 

Julian's  arts  to  undermine  and  extirpate 
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Printed  by  J.  D.  for  the  author  1689 
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Locke,  John,   1632-1704 

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Tutchin,   John 

New  martyrology;  a  history  of  those 
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Bakker,  Adriaen? 

Memorie  van  rechten;  by  Mr  A.  B.,  hooft- 
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Rienwartaz   1690  7p 

NY 

[Locke,  John,    1632-1704] 
Second    letter   concerning   toleration    .  .  . 

London,  Printed  for  A.  &  J.  Churchill 

1690  68p 
Y 

Signed  Philanthropus.  In  reply  to  the  Argu- 
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[Proast,    Jonas] 

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Y 

Soupirs    de    la    France    esclave,    qui    aspire 
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LC 

[Locke,    John,    1632-1704] 
Third  letter  for  toleration,  to  the  author 
[J.    Proast]     of    the    Third    letter    con- 
cerning   toleration.      London,     Printed 
for  A.  &  J.  Churchill  1692  350p 

Y 

Signed  Philanthropus.  [Bound  with  his 
Second  letter  concerning  toleration.  London 
1690.] 

[Proast,  Jonas] 

Second  letter  to  the  author  [John  Locke] 
of  the  Three  letters  for  toleration  from 
the  author  of  the  Argument  of  the 
Letter  concerning  toleration  briefly 
consider'd  and  answer'd,  and  of  the 
defense  of  it;  with  a  postcript,  taking 
some  notice  of  two  passages  in  the 
Rights  of  Protestant  dissenters.  Ox- 
ford, Printed  for  H.  Clements  1691?  24p 
Y 

Account  of  Mr  Blount's  late  book  entitled 
King  William  and  Queen  Mary,  con- 
querors, ordered  by  the  House  of 
commons    to    be    burnt.      London    1693 

Blount,  Charles,  1654-1693 

Reasons  humbly  offered  for  the  liberty 
of  unlicens'd  printing;  to  which  is  sub- 
join'd.  The  just  and  true  character  of 
Edmund  Bohun,  the  licenser  of  the 
press,  in  a  letter  from  a  gentleman  in 
the  country,  to  a  member  of  Parlia- 
ment.    London  1693  32p  _ 

Some  of  this  author's  deistical  writings  were 
suppressed.  See:  Schroeder,  T.  Constitutional 
free   speech,   P306-8. 

LC 

Bradford,  William,   1660 ?-l 752 

New  England's  spirit  of  persecution 
transmitted  to  Pennsvlvania.  New 
York,    [The  author?]    1693 

Blount,  Charles,  1654-1693 

Just  vindication  of  learning  and  the  lib- 
erty of  the  press.     London  1695  23p 

NY 

Written  after  his  own  books  had  been  sup- 
pressed. 


FREE  SPEECH 


17 


Laud,  William,  archbishop  of  Canterbury, 
1573-1645 
History  of  his  troubles  and  tryal.  wrote 
by  himself,  with  a  diary  of  his  own 
time,  etc.  [by  Henry  Wharton.]  n.p. 
1695 

Tindal,  Matthew,   1657P-1733 

Essay  concerning  the  power  of  themagis- 
trate  and  the  rights  of  mankind  in  mat- 
ters of  religion;  with  some  reasons  in 
particular  for  the  Dissenters  not  being 
obliged  to  take  the  sacramental  tests 
but  in  their  own  churches.  London, 
A.  Bell  1697  204p 

NY 

Tindal's    translation    of    the    Bible    had    been 
suppressed. 

Collier,  Jeremy,   1650-1726 

Short  view  of  the  immorality  and  pro- 
fancncss  of  the  English  stage,  together 
with  the  sense  of  antiquity  upon  this 
argument.  London,  Keble,  Sare  & 
Strahan  1698  (16),  288p 

B 

— Same.  2d  ed  London,  Keble,  Sare  & 
Strahan  1698  (16),  288p 

B 

— Same.  3d  ed  London,  Keble,  Sare  & 
Strahan  1698  (16),  288p 

Y 

— Same.  4th  ed  London,  Keble,  Sare  & 
Strahan    1699    (16),   288p 

B   Y 

— Same;  with  the  several  defences  of  the 
same,  in  answer  to  Mr  [William]  Con- 
greve,  Dr  Drake,  etc.  London,  Keble, 
Sare  &  Strahan   1728   (14),  437p 

B 

Dennis,  John,  1657-1734 

Usefulness  of  the  stage,  occasioned  by 
a  late  book,  written  bv  Jeremy  Col- 
lier .  .  .  London   1698  143p 

Y 

Letter  to  a  member  of  Parliament,  shew- 
ing, that  a  restraint  on  the  press  is 
inconsistent  with  the  Protestant  reli- 
gion, and  dangerous  to  the  liberties  of 
the  nation.  London,  Printed  by  J. 
Darby,  and  sold  bv  A.  Bell  1698  32p 

LC  TS 

Stage  condemn'd,  and  the  encouragement 
given  to  the  immoralities  and  profane- 
ness  of  the  theatre,  by  the  English 
schools,  universities  and  pulpits,  cen- 
sur'd.  King  Charles  L  Sundays  mask 
and  declaration  for  sports  and  pastimes 
on  the  Sabbath,  largely  related  and 
animadverted  upon.  The  arguments  of 
al  the  authors  that  have  writ  in  de- 
fence of  the  stage  against  Mr  Collier, 
consider'd  .  .  .  And  remarks  on  diverse 
late  plays,  as  also  on  those  presented 
by  the  two  universities  to  King  Charles 
I.    London,   J.    Salusbury    1698  216p 

LC  NY  Y 

Vindication  of  the  stage,  with  the  Tiseful- 
ness  and  advantages  of  dramatick  rep- 
resentations, in  answer  to  Afr  Collier's 


late  book,  mtitlcd,  A  vi-w  of  the  pro- 
phanesse  [!]  and  immorality,  etc.,  in  a 
letter  to  a  friend  .  .  .  London  1698 
29p 


[Willis,  Richard] 

Occasional  paper:  number  IX;  contain- 
ing some  considerations  about  the  dan- 
ger of  going  to  stage  plays  .  .  .  London 
1698  23p 

Y 

Collier,  Jeremy,   1650-1726 

Defence  of  the  Short  view  of  the  pro- 
faneness  and  inunorality  of  the  Eng- 
lish stage,  etc.;  being  a  reply  to  Mr 
[William]  Congrevc's  Amendments, 
etc.,  and  to  the  Vindication  of  the  au- 
thor of  the  Relapse  [Sir  T.  Vanbrugh]. 
London,  Keble,  Sare  &  Strahan  1699 
139p 

B   NY  Y 

— Same.      London,    Keble,   Sare    &   Strahan 
1705  139p 

B   Y 

— Same.  (In  his:  Short  view  of  the  pro- 
faneness  and  immorality  of  the  Eng- 
lish stage,  etc.;  with  the  several  de- 
fences of  the  same.  pl91-294)  Lon- 
don 1728 

B 

— Same.  (In  his:  Short  view  of  the  pro- 
faneness  and  immorality  of  the  English 
stage,  etc.;  with  several  defences  of 
the    same.      p295-404)    London    1728 

B 

[Drake,  James]   1667-1707 

Antient   and  modern   stages  survev'd;   or, 

Mr    Collier's    view    of    immorality    and 

profaness   [!]    of  the  English  stage  set 

in   a  true  light   .  .  .   London    1699  367p 

Y 

Lamotte,   Charles 

Essay  upon  poetry  and  painting,  with 
relation  to  the  sacred  and  profane  his- 
tory, with  an  appendix  concerning 
obscenity  in  writing  and  painting  .  .  . 
[London?]    1699 

— Same.  2d  ed  London,  Printed  for  F. 
Fayram  &  T.  Hatchett  1731  vii,202p 

TS 

—Same.  Dublin,  Printed  by  T.  Bacon  1742 
202p 

LC 

Letter  to  a  member  of  Parliament,  show- 
ing the  necessity  of  regulating  the 
press,  with  a  particular  answer  to  the 
objections  that  of  late  have  been  advo- 
cated against  it.     Oxford  1699  71p 

Muggleton,  Lodowick,  1609-1697 

The  acts  of  the  witnesses  of  the  spirit, 
in  five  parts.  One  of  the  two  witnesses 
and  true  prophets  of  the  only  high,  im- 
mortal, glorious  God,  Christ  Jesus. 
Left  by  him  to  be  published  after  his 


18 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Muggleton,   hodowick— Continued 

death.    .  .  .    London    .  .  .    1699   and    re- 
printed in  the  year  1764.     179p 

TS 

This  gives  a  more  detailed  account  of  his 
various  trials  for  blasphemy  than  I  had  seen 
when  I  wrote:  Constitutional  free  speech.  Also 
names  all  his  suppressed  publications  and  those 
not   suppressed. 

Stage  acquitted:  being  a  full  answer  to  Mr 
Collier.      1699 

Whitgift,  John 

Life,  by  Sir  Geo.  Paulc,  with  a  treatise, 
intituled.  Conspiracy  for  pretended  ref- 
ormation, written  in  1591  by  Richard 
Cosin,    Dean   of   the   Arches.    1699 


18th  Century 
1700-1710 

Fanaticism  triumphant;  or,  A  speciman  of 
.some  dangerous  and  seditious  passages 
in  a  late  virulent  libel  intituled  Con- 
siderations on  the  present  state  of 
Great  Britain;  with  several  remarks 
upon  the  reigns  of  King  James  I, 
Charles  I,  etc.,  unto  the  end  of  the 
Stuart's  race  in  Queen  Anne.  Wherein 
the  church  of  England  is  ridiculed,  her 
clergy  bufifoon'd,  her  liturgy  rcvil'd, 
and  both  our  universities  ignominiously 
treated.  In  a  letter  to  a  friend,  to 
which  is  added.  King  James  and  King 
Charles  I  caution  against  the  fanaticks. 
London,   E.   Berrington    [17 — ]    163-23p 

NY 

Asgill,  John,   1659-1738 

Argument  to  prove  that  death  is  not 
obligatory  on  Christians  .  .  .  London 
1700 

For  this  Asgill  was  excluded  successively  from 
the   Irish   and   English   House   of   commons' 

Collier,  Jeremy,   1650-1726 

Second  defence  of  the  Short  view  of  the 
profaneness  and  immorality  of  the 
English  stage,  etc.;  being  a  reply  to  a 
book,  entituled.  The  ancient  and  mod- 
ern stages  surveyed,  etc.  [by  Tames 
Drake].  London,  Keble,  Sare  & 
Strahan    1700    142p 

B   Y 

[Grant,  Sir  Francis,  Lord  Cullen] 

Discourse  concerning  the  execution  of 
the  laws  made  against  profaneness,  etc. 
.  .  .  Edinburgh,  George  IMosman, 
printer   1700  56p 

NY  TS 

Reasons  humbly  offer'd  for  a  law  to  enact 
the  castration  of  popish  ecclesiastics, 
as  the  best  way  to  prevent  the  growth 
of  popery  in  England.  London,  Printed 
by  A.  Baldwin  in  Warwicklane  1700 
26p 

An   extraordinary   pamphlet    written    in    a   verv 
free   style. 

Account  of  the  societies  for  reformation 
of  manners,  in  England  and  Ireland; 
with    a    persuasive    to    persons    of    all 


TS 


ranks,  to  be  zealous  and  diligent  in 
promoting  the  execution  of  the  laws 
against  profaneness  and  debauchery, 
for  the  effecting  a  national  reformation 
.  .  .  5th  ed  London,  Printed  for  J. 
Downing   1701    138p 

Supplement    of    26p.    gives   laws,    offenses    and 
penalties  tabulated. 

Jeffreys,  George,  1648-1689 

Merciful  assizes;  or,  A  panegyric  on  the 
late  Lord  Jeffreys'  hanging  so  many  in 
the  West,  with  the  lives,  characters 
and  dying  speeches  of  the  many  hun- 
dreds that  were  converted  by  His  Lord- 
ship's sentence,  n.p.  1701 

Jeffreys    was    the    most    relentless    of    judicial 
persecutors. 

Ramsay,  James 

Toleration's  fence  removed  .  .  .  Edin- 
burgh   1701 

[Somers,  John  Somers,  baron]  1651-1716 
Jura  populi  Anglicani;  or.  The  subject's 
right  of  petitioning  set  forth;  oc- 
casioned by  the  case  of  the  Kentish 
petitioners;  with  some  thoughts  on  the 
reasons  which  induc'd  those  gentlemen 
to  petition,  and  of  the  Commons  right 
of  imprisoning.  London  1701  xiv,15- 
64p 

Y 

Jura  populi  Anglicani;  or.  The  subject's 
right  of  petitioning  set  forth  .  .  .  an- 
swered, paragraph  by  paragraph  and 
made  publick,  to  undeceive  the  minds 
of  those  who  are  prejudiced  by  the 
pernicious  tenants  which  are  made  use 
of  in  the  said  scandalous  libel.  Lon- 
don  1701   viii,112p 

Y 

[Dennis,   John] 

Danger  of  priestcraft  to  religion  and 
government  with  some  politick  reasons 
for  toleration;  occasion'd  by  a  discourse 
of  Mr  Sacheverel's  intitul'd  The  polit- 
ical union,  etc.,  lately  printed  at  Ox- 
ford; in  a  letter  to  a  new-elected  mem- 
ber of  parliament.  London  1702 
NY 

Fuller,  William,  1670-1717? 

Tryal  of  W.  Fuller,  upon  an  information 
for  being  an  imposter,  and  of  ill  name 
and  reputation;  falsely  .  .  .  and  sedi- 
tiously contriving  .  .  .  the  late  King 
William  and  his  subjects  falsely  and 
unlawfully  to  delude  and  deceive,  and 
discords  between  said  late  king  and  his 
peers,  and  the  noblemen  of  this  king- 
dom, to  excite  and  stir  up.  by  publish- 
ing two  scandalous  libels,  the  one  called 
The  original  letters  from  the  late  king; 
the  other  called.  Twenty-six  depositions 
of  persons  of  qualitv  and  worth  .  .  . 
London,   I.   Cleave   1702   13p 

Muijncq,  Alexander  de 

Korte  aanwysinge  vande  validiteyt  vande 
bueien  van  abolitie,  vcrleemt  by  den 
.  .  .    stadhon    der    deser    provintie    van 


FREE  SPEECH 


19 


Zeeland  aan  Mr  a.  de  M.,  op  den  20 
July,  1681.  [Middleburg,  A.  van  Poulle 
1702?]  24p 

NY 

Bishop,  George,  d.  1668 

New  England  judged  by  the  spirit  of  the 
Lord.  In  two  parts — first,  containing 
a  brief  relation  of  the  sufferings  of  the 
Quakers  in  New  England,  from  1656  to 
1660,  wherein  their  merciless  whip- 
pings, chainings,  imprisonings,  burn- 
ings of  hands,  cutting  off  ears,  and  put- 
ting to  death,  with  divers  other  cruel- 
tics  inflicted  upon  the  bodies  of  inno- 
cent men  and  women,  only  for  con- 
science sake,  are  described;  second 
part,  being  a  further  relation  of  the 
cruel  and  bloody  sufferings  of  the 
people  called  Quakers,  continued  from 
1660  to  1665;  with  an  appendix  contain- 
ing the  writings  of  several  of  the  suf- 
ferers, also  an  Answer  to  Cottin 
Mather's  abuses  of  the  said  people,  in 
his  late  History  of  New  England,  1702. 
London,  T.  Sowle   1703  498,  212p 

NY 

[Brown,  John] 
Toleration  defended;  or,  The  letter  from 
a     gentleman     [Tames     Ramsay]     to    a 
member  of   Parliament   concerning   tol- 
eration  considered.      London    1703 

Sound  and  solid  reason  against  the  Presby- 
terian prints,  anent  patronages  whereby 
the  pretended  divine  right  of  the  pop- 
ular election  of  pastors  is  perpetually 
barr'd.     Secretly  printed  1703  20p 

Tryal,  examination,  and  condenmation  of 
occasional  conformity,  etc.  at  a  ses- 
sions of  Oyer  and  Terminer,  held  at 
Troynovant.  before  Mr  Justice  Up- 
right and  ^Ir  Baron  Integrity  .  .  .  26th 
of  J— v.  1703.  Printed  in  the  vcar  1703 
27p 

Vindication  of  the  constitution  of  the  Eng- 
lish monarchy,  and  the  just  rights  of 
the  people;  or.  Faction,  and  corruption, 
enemies  to  religion,  liberty  and  prop- 
erty ...  by  a  lover  of  his  countrey, 
and  Her  Afaiestv's  faithful  subject. 
London    1703   28p 

NY 

Proast,  Jonas 

Thi'-d  letter  concerning  toleration  in  de- 
fense of  tlic  .Argument  of  the  Letter 
concnrning  toleration  [by  John  Locke] 
briefly  consider'd  and  answer'd  .  .  . 
Oxford,  Printed  for  G.  \\'est  &  H. 
Clements  1704?  79p 

Y 

Representation  of  the  impiety  and  im- 
morality of  the  English  stage:  with 
reasons  for  putting  a  stop  thereto;  and 
some  questions  addrest  to  those  who 
freouent  tlie  play-house.  3d  cd  London 
1704  12p 

Y 

Some  considerations  about  the  danger  of 
going  to  plays.     1704 


Bedford.  Arthur,  1668-1745 

Serious  reflections  on  the  scandalous 
abuse  and  effects  of  the  stage;  in  a 
sermon,  in  Bristol,  7th  January,  170  4/5? 
Bristol,  England,  Bonny   1705    [23]   44p 

B  Y 

[Defoe,  Daniel]   1661-1731 
The    experiment;    or,    The    shortest    way 
with   the   Dissenters  exemplified  in  the 
case  of   Mr  A.   Gill  ...  in  the   Isle  of 
Ely.     1705 

— Same.     (In:     Famous     pamphlets,     pl37- 
59) 

TS 

Atterbury,  Francis,  bishop  of  Rochester, 
1662-1732 
The  axe  laid  to  the  root  of  the  tree;  or, 
A  speciman  of  profaneness  and  blas- 
phemy in  some  late  writings.  London 
1706 

Bedford,   Arthur,    1668-1745 

Evil  and  danger  of  stage-plays:  shewing 
their  natural  tendency  to  destroy  reli- 
gion, and  introduce  a  general  corrup- 
tion of  manners,  in  almost  two  thou- 
sand instances,  taken  from  the  plays 
of  the  last  two  years.  Bristol,  Eng- 
land,  Bonney   1706 

B   Y 

[Collection  of  documents  and  letters  relat- 
ing  to    Carolina.      London?    1706?]    67p 

LC 

[Defoe,  Daniel]  1661-1731 
Case  of  the  Protestant  dissenters  in 
Carolina,  shewing  how  a  law  to  prevent 
occasional  conformity  there,  has  ended 
in  a  total  subversion  of  the  constitu- 
tion in  church  and  state;  recommended 
to  the  serious  consideration  of  all  that 
are  true  friends  to  our  present  estab- 
lishment  .  .  .    London    1706  42,   67p 

LC 

Leydekker,    Melchior 

Melchioris  Leydccheri  apologia  adversus 
infamis  libelli  .  .  .  [Ultrajecti,  T.  A\"ag- 
cns    1706]    7p 

NY 

Makemie.  Francis,   1658 M70S 

A  good  conversation;  a  sermon  preached 
at  the  City  of  New  York.  January  19, 
1706.  Boston,  Printed  bv  B.  Green  for 
B.  Eliot  1707  36p 

The  above  entry  and  the  following  note  from 
Evan's  American  Bibliography  no.  t^qS:  "For 
preaching  this  sermon  in  a  private  house  with- 
out license,  after  Governor  Cornhury  had  re- 
fused to  permit  him  to  preach  in  the  Dutch 
Church,  in  New  York  City,  the  author  was 
imprisoned  for  two  months  and  liberated  after 
paying  heavy  costs.  Reprinted  in  the  collections 
of    the    New    York    Historical    Society    3:411." 

A  narrative  of  a  new  and  usual  .American 
imjirisonment  of  two  Presbyterian  min- 
isters, and  prosecution  of  Mr  Francis 
Makemie,  one  of  them,  for  preaching 
one  sermon  at  the  City  of  New  York. 
By  a  learner  of  law,  and  lover  of  lib- 
erty. [Boston],  Printed  for  the  pub- 
lisher 1707  47p      ' 

.  .  .  Republished  in  London,  1708:  in  New 
York   in    1755.   and   in   the   Force   Tracts 


20 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Tindal,   Matthew,   1657?- 1733 

Rights  of  the  Christian  church  asserted 
against  the  Romish  and  other  priests 
who  claim  an  independent  power  over 
it;  with  a  preface  concerning  the 
Church  of  England.  2d  ed  1706;  3d 
ed  1707 

Filmer,  Edward,  fll.   1707 

Defence  of  plays;  or,  The  state  vindicat- 
ed, from  several  passages  in  Mr  Col- 
lier's Short  view,  etc.  .  .  .  London  1707 
167p 

Y 

Barbeyrac 

The  power  of  the  sovereign  and  the  right 
of  liberty  of  conscience,  in  two  dis- 
courses, with  preface  and  notes,  made 
English  by  Mr  Savage.     1708 

Bayle,   Pierre,   1647-1706 

Philosophical  commentary  on  the  words 
of  the  gospel,  Luke  14:23:  Compel  them 
to  come  in,  that  my  house  may  be  full 
.  .  .  London   1708  2v 

HCL 

Disney,    John,    1677-1730 

Essay  upon  the  execution  of  the  laws 
against  immorality  and  prophaneness. 
1708_ 

This  and  another  essay  published  in  17  lo, 
were  republished  in  1729,  as  one  essay  under 
the  title  "View  of  ancient  laws  against  immor- 
ality   and    prophaneness." 

Letter  to  a  friend;  occasioned  by  the  pre- 
sentment of  the  grand  jury  for  the 
county  of  Middlesex,  of  the  author, 
printer,  and  publisher  of  a  book  en- 
titled The  rights  of  the  Christian  church 
asserted.      London    1708 

Short  account  of  the  complaints  and  cruel 
persecutions  of  the  Protestants  in  the 
kingdom  of  France,  with  an  account 
of  the  torments  the  French  Prot- 
estants endure  aboard  the  galleys  (by 
John  Bion);  there  is  likewise  K.  Charles 
IL  and  K.  William  and  Qu.  Mary's 
Declarations  (Dedicated  in  French  and 
English).  London,  W.  Redmayne 
1708 

Tindal,  Matthew,  165  7?- 1733 

Second  defence  of  the  Rights  of  the 
Christian  church,  occasioned  by  two 
late  indictments  against  a  bookseller 
and  his  servant  for  selling  one  of  said 
books;  in  a  letter  from  a  gentleman 
in  London  to  a  clergyman  in  the  coun- 
try ..  .  London  1708 

Collection  of  the  several  statutes,  and  parts 
of  statutes,  now  in  force,  relating  to 
high  treason  and  misprision  of  high 
treason.  [London]  Printed  by  Charles 
Bill    1709 

Hillard,    Samuel 

Narrative  of  the  prosecution  of  Mr  Sare 
and  his  servant  for  selling  the  "Rights 
of  the  Christian  church"  in  answer  to 
what  relates  to  that  prosecution  in  the 
second  part  of  the  Defence  of  the  said 
book  [by  M.  Tindal].     London  1709 


Nelson,   W[illiam] 

Rights  of  the  clergy  of  Great  Britain;  as 
established  by  the  canons,  the  common 
law,  and  the  statutes  of  the  realm, 
being  a  methodical  collection  under 
proper  titles,  of  all  things  relating  to 
the  clergy  .  .  .  London,  C.  Harper  1709 
[10]    551p 

Sacherevell,  Henry  1674(?)-1724 

The  perils  of  false  brethren;  a  sermon. 
[London?]  1709 

Preached  and  printed,  August  15  and  No- 
vember 5,  1709,  two  sermons  attacking  Low- 
churchman  and  dissenters,  for  which  he  was  on 
the  23d  of  March,  17 10,  suspended  by  the  House 
of  lords   for   three  years. 

TS 

Suffering  case  of  several  of  the  people 
commonly  called  Quakers,  on  suits 
mostly  commenced  for  tj^thes,  in  the 
Court  of  exchequer,  since  the  Acts 
made  for  the  more  easie  recovery  of 
tithes.      London,    J.    Sowle    1709 

Tindal,  Matthew,  165 7?- 1733 

Four  discourses  on  the  following  sub- 
jects: viz.  1.  Of  obedience  to  the 
supreme  powers,  and  the  duty  of  sub- 
jects in  all  revolutions;  2.  Of  the  laws 
of  nations,  and  the  rights  of  sovereigns; 
3.  Of  the  power  of  the  magistrate,  and 
the  rights  of  mankind,  in  matters  of 
religion;  4.  Of  the  liberty  of  the  press. 
London  1709  329p 

NY  TS 

Reasons     against    restraining    the    press. 
The     author     Dr     Tyndal.       1709     (In: 
Baron,    R.,    ed.      Pillars    of    priestcraft 
and    orthodoxy    shaken.      4:281-99) 
B  NY 

First  printed  in    1704,    isp. 

1710-1720 

Divine  rights  of  the  British  nation  and  con- 
stitution vindicated  in  remarks  on  the 
several  papers  publish'd  against  the 
Reverend  Air  Hoadly's  considerations 
upon  the  Bishop  of  Exeter's  sermons. 
viz.  Answers  to  Mr  Hoadlj^  by  Bp  of 
Exeter;    Vindication   of   the   bishop,   by 

Mr  O th;  Tom  a  Bedlam,  by  L[u]ke 

M[ilbour]ne;    Revolution    no    rebellion, 

by   Mr    P te;    Best   answer,    etc.    by 

L[esle]y.     London,   T.  Baker  1710  126p 

TS 

Hall,  Joseph,   1574-1656 

Bishop  Hall's  hard  measure.  Written  by 
himself  upon  his  impeachment  .  .  .  for 
defending  the  Church  of  England.  Be- 
ing a  case  something  parallel  to  Dr. 
S[acheveral].  [In:  Answer  to  pope  Ur- 
ban. London,  >s\  Bourne  1629]  London, 
Reprinted  1710  16p 

Robertson,  William 

Dissenters  self-condemn'd;  being  a  full 
answer  to  Mr  De  Laune's  plea  for  non- 
conformists, lately  recommended  by 
Mr  Daniel  Foe,  author  of  the  review; 
wherein     their     main     principle      (that 


FREE  SPEECH 


21 


nothing  is  lawful  in  the  worshij)  of 
God,  but  what  He  hath  expressly  com- 
manded) is  not  only  examined  and  dis- 
proved, but  made  to  appear  to  be  re- 
pugnant to  their  other  opinions  and 
stated  practices,  and  all  their  objections 
and  .cavils  against  the  church's  power, 
in  decreeing  and  enjoyning  her  decent 
rites  and  ceremonies  are  effectually 
answer'd;  to  which  is  added.  The  Dis- 
senters harmony  in  principles  with  the 
Papists,  with  a  letter  prefixed  to  Mr 
Daniel   Foe.     London   1710 

[Sacheverell,  Henry],  1674-1724 
Bishop  of  Lincoln's  and  Bishop  of  Nor- 
wich's speeches  in  the  House  of  lords, 
March  the  17th:  at  the  opening  of  the 
second  article  of  the  impeachment  .  .  . 
London,  Printed  for  T.  Morphew  1710 
12p 

TS 

Impeached  by  the  House  of  lords  for  preach- 
ing  the    doctrine    of    absolute   non-resistance. 

Bishop  of  Salisbury's  and  the  Bishop  of 
Oxford's  speeches  in  the  House  of 
lords  on  the  first  article  of  impeach- 
ment of  .  .  .  London,  J.  Morphew  1710 
Hp 
TS 

Collection  of  the  addresses  which  have 
been  presented  to  the  queen,  since  the 
impeachment  of  .  .  .  whereby  it  most 
evidently  appears  that  the  sense  of  the 
kingdom,  whether  nobility,  clergy, 
gentry  or  commonalty,  is  express  for 
the  doctrine  of  passive  obedience  and 
non  resistance,  and  for  Her  Majesty's 
heredity  title  to  the  throne  of  her  an- 
cestors. London,  J.  Morphew  1710  47p 
TS 

Impartial  account  of  what  pass'd  most 
remarkable  in  the  late  session  of  Parlia- 
ment, relating  to  the  case  of  Dr  Henry 
Sacheverell.  .  .  .  [London]  Printed  for 
Tacob  Tonson  1710  16,  f41p 
TS 

Names  of  the  right  honourable  peers,  who 
protested  against  some  proceedings  in 
the  case  .  .  .  together  with  their  lord- 
ships reasons  for  such  protestation, 
n.p.  Printed  in  the  vear  1710  8p 
TS 

Tryal  .  .  .  before  the  House  of  Peers  for 
high    crimes    and    misdemeanors:    upon 
an   impeachment   .  .  .   London,    Printed 
for  J.  Tonson    1710  327p 
NY  TS 

Briefly     abstracted     in      Schrocder,     T.      Free 
speech  for  radicals,  pio:-2. 

[Defoe.  Daniel]   1661-1731 

Speech  of  Mr  D — sse  vounger  of  Arnis- 
town.  if  he  should 'be  impeach'd  of 
h — t — n  for  what  he  said  and  did  about 
the  Pretender's  medal,  latelv  sent  to 
the  Faculty  of  advocates  at  Edinburgh. 
London,  Printed  for  J.  Baker  1711   I5p 

LC 


Anderton,   [William] 

Mr  Anderton's,  [the  printer's]  plea  at 
the  Old  Bailey.  (In:  G.  Sawbridge.  A 
collection  of  scarce  and  valuable  papers. 
1:228-32   London    1712) 

NY 

Arguments  relating  to  a  restraint  upon  the 
press,  fully  and  fairly  handled  in  a  let- 
ter to  a  Bencher  from  a  young  gentle- 
man of  the  Temple;  with  proposals 
humbly  offered  to  the  consideration  of 
both  houses  of  Parliament.  London, 
R.  &  J.  Bonwicke   1712  51p 

NY  TS 

[Asgill,  John]  1659-1738 
An    essay    for    the    press.      London,    A. 
Baldwin   1712  8p 

NY  Y 

Asgill  was  excluded  from  both  Irish  and  Eng- 
lish   Houses    of    commons,    for    trying    to    prove 
immortality    in    the    flesh    to    be    scriptural.    See: 
Schroeder,   T. :   Constitutional   free  speech,   P3i8- 

22. 

Bray,  Thomas,   1656-1730 

Papal  usurpation  and  persecution  as  it 
has  been  exercis'd  in  ancient  and  mod- 
ern times  with  respect  both  to  princes 
and  people  .  .  .  London,  Joseph  Down- 
ing  1712  2v   in    1 

NY 

Part  I.  Concerning  the  ursurpations,  wars, 
and  persecutions  of  the  popes  and  popish 
clergy   .  .  .    1712. 

Part  2.  History  of  the  old  Waldenses  and 
Albigenses  ...  by  John  Paul  Perrin;  tr.  from 
the    French.    171 1. 

De  Laune,  Thomas 

Narrative  of  the  suflPerings  of  Thomas  De 
Laune  for  writing  and  printing  and 
publishing  a  late  book  called  A  plea 
for  the  non-conformists;  with  some 
modest  reflections  thereon,  directed  to 
Dr  Calamy,  in  obedience  to  whose  call, 
that   work   was   imdertaken.      1712 

Reprinted  in  1763  in  De  Laune's  "A  plea 
for  non-conformists,"  Boston.  Again  reprinted 
in    1784. 

See  Schroeder,  T.     Constitutional  free  speech, 

P300-2. 

Press  restrained:  a  poem,  occasion'd  by  a 
resolution  of  the  House  of  commons, 
to  consider  that  part  of  Her  Afajesty's 
message  to  the  House,  which  relates  to 
the  great  license  taken  in  publishing 
false  and  scandalous  libels.  London, 
T.  Morphew  1712  16p 

NY" 

Speciman  of  papal  and  French  persecution 
exhibited  in  the  cruel  sufferings  of  the 
eminent  martyr,  Lewis  de  Marolles, 
with  the  torments  of  the  French  Prot- 
estants aboard  gallies.  London  1712 
171p 

Strahan,  William 

Toleration  in  Scotland  no  breach  of  the 
union.     London   1712 

Thoughts  of  a  Tory  author  concerning  the 
press;  with  the  opinion  of  the  ancients 
and  moderns  about  the  freedom  of 
speech  and  writing.     London  1712 

HCL 

Sometimes  ascribed  to  Addison. 


22 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Collins,  Anthony,  1676-1729 

Discourse  of  free-thinking,  occasion'd  by 
the  rise  and  growth  of  a  sect  call'd 
free-thinkers.      London    1713    140p 

TS 

An  argument  for  the  necessity  and  exped- 
iency of  intellectual  freedom,  especially  on  sub- 
jects   of    religion. 

Eighteenth  century  controversy  on  the  sub- 
ject of  frcethinking:  including  Anthony 
Collins'  celebrated  "Discourse  of  free- 
thinking"  1713;  together  with  the  "An- 
swers" by  Whiston,  Hoadley,  Bentley, 
and  others,  ten  pamphlets  in  one  vol- 
ume.     [London?]    1713-17 

[Defoe,  Daniel]   1661-1731 

Remedy  worse  than  the  disease;  or,  Rea- 
sons against  passing  the  bill  for  pre- 
venting the  growth  of  schism;  to  which 
is  added,  a  brief  discourse  of  toleration 
and  persecution,  shewing,  their  unavoid- 
able cfifects  good  or  bad  ...  in  a  letter 
to  a   noble   earl   .  .  .    London    1714  48p 

Y 

[Hoadly,  Benjamin]  bishop  of  Win- 
chester, 1676-1761 
Letter  to  a  friend  in  Lancashire,  oc- 
casioned by  a  report,  concerning  in- 
junctions, and  prohibitions  by  author- 
ity; relating  to  some  points  of  religion, 
now  in  debate.  (In:  Baron,  R.,  ed. 
Pillars  of  priestcraft  and  orthodoxy 
shaken.  1768  3:111-25) 

NY       _ 

First    published    in    17 14. 

Walker,  John 

An  attempt  towards  recovering  an  ac- 
count of  the  nuinbers  and  sufferings  of 
the  clergy,  heads  of  colleges,  fellows, 
scholars,  and  others,  who  were  se- 
questered, harassed,  etc.  in  the  late 
times  of  the  great  rebellion.  London 
1714 

Contains  list  of  the  Loyal  and  Episcopal 
clergy  who  were  sequestered;  with  an  account 
of  their  imprisonments. 

Watts,  Robert 

Two  letters  to  the  right  honorable  the 
lord  viscount  Townsend:  shewing  the 
seditious  tendency  of  several  late  pam- 
phlets; more  particularly  of  a  review 
of  the  Lutheran  principles,  by  Tho. 
Brett,  .  .  .  rector  of  Bettas  Langer  in 
Kent,  and  of  A  letter  to  the  author  of 
the  Lutheran  church,  from  a  country 
school-boy;  by  a  presbyter  of  the 
Church   of   England.      London    1714 

Burnett,  Thomas 

British  bulwark:  a  collection  of  clauses 
in  the  statutes  against  the  Pretender, 
Non-Jurors,   and   Papists,   &c.   1715  48p 

Webster,   James 

Libel  of  Mr  James  Webster  against  Mr 
John  Sim  son,  professor  of  divinity  in 
the  Universitv  of  Glasgow  ...  n  t  p 
[Glasgow  1715]   288p 

NY 


Whiting,    John,    1656-1722 

Persecution  expos'd,  in  some  memoirs 
relating  to  the  sufferings  of  John  Whit- 
ing, and  many  others  of  the  people 
called  Quakers,  for  conscience  sake,  in 
the  west  of  England,  etc.;  with 
memoirs  of  many  eminent  friends  de- 
ceased, and  other  memorable  matters 
and  occurrences  ...  to  the  year  1696 
.  .  .  London,  Printed  and  sold  by  the 
assigns    of   J.    Sowle    1715    245p 

LC  Y 


Account  of  the  proceedings  against  the 
rebels,  and  other  prisoners  tried  be- 
fore Justice  Jefiferies,  in  the  west  of 
England,  1685,  with  a  compleat  list  of 
all  the  persons  that  suffered,  the  coun- 
ties they  suffer'd  in,  &c.  1716  76p 


[Amauld,   Antoine]    1612-1696 
De  la  calomnie;   ou.  Instruction  du   pro- 
ces    entre    les   Jesuites    et    leurs    adver- 
saires,    sur   la    matiere    de    la    calomnie. 
2  ed    [Paris?]    1716  v-xvi,612p 

LC  NY 


[Hare,  Francis]    1665-1740 

Difficulties  and  discouragements  which 
attend  the  study  of  the  Scriptures  in 
the  way  of  private  judgment;  repre- 
sented in  a  letter  to  a  young  clergyman, 
in  order  to  show,  that,  since  such  a 
study  of  the  Scriptures  is  men's  indis- 
pensible  duty,  it  concerns  all  Christian 
societies  to  remove  (as  much  as  pos- 
sible) those  discouragements  ...  to 
which  is  annexed,  The  censure  of  the 
lower  house  of  convocation  upon  this 
book  .  .  .  (In:  Baron,  R.,  ed.  Pillars 
of  priestcraft  and  orthodoxy  shaken. 
1768  4:7-69) 

NY 

First   published   in    1716. 

Walthoe,  J. 

Summary  of  the  penal  laws  relating  to 
non-jurors,  papists,  popish  recusants, 
and  nonconformists,  and  the  late  stat- 
utes concerning  the  succession,  riots, 
and  imprisonments  of  suspected  per- 
sons ...  to  which  are  added,  several  ad- 
judged cases  and  notes  upon  the  most 
material  points:  wherein  are  contained 
all  the  oaths,  submissions,  declarations, 
confessions  of  faith  and  afifirmations, 
required  by  the  government  since  the 
first  year  of  Queen  Elizabeth  to  the 
present  vear  1716.  .  .  .  London,  Printed 
by    I.    N.    Afifignee    104p 

TS 

[Fleetwood,  William]  bishop  of  Ely?  1656- 
1723 
Letter  to  the  Reverend  Dr  Snape;  where- 
in the  authority  of  the  Christian  priest- 
hood is   maintained;    the  uninterrupted 


FREE  SPEECH 


23 


succession  of  bishops  from  the  apostle's 
days  is  lineally  deduced;  and  the  cavils 
of  the  heretics  and  fanatics  are  an- 
swered. (In:  Baron,  R.,  ed.  Pillars  of 
priestcraft  and  orthodoxy  shaken.  1768 
3:7-78) 

First   published    in    17:8. 

Bedford,  Arthur,  1668-1745 

Serious  remonstrance  in  behalf  of  the 
Christian  religion,  against  the  horrid 
blasphemies  and  impieties  which  are 
still  used  in  the  English  play-houses. 
London,  Hammond  1719  xx,383p 

B  Y 

Calamy,  Edmund,  1671-1732 

Church  and  the  Dissenters  compar'd,  as 
to  persecution,  in  some  remarks  on  Dr 
Walker's  attempt  to  recover  the  names 
and  sufferings  of  the  clergy  that  were 
sequestered,  .  .  .  between  1640  and 
1660.     London,  J.   Clark   1719  98p 

NY 

[Fleetwood,  William]  bishop  of  Ely,  1656- 
1723 
Curate  of  Wilts  his  second  letter  to  the 
Reverend  Dr  Snape;  or.  Reasons  against 
the  bill  now  depending  in  the  House 
of  commons;  being  a  full  answer  to  the 
Bishop  of  Bangor's  late  book,  entitled, 
The  common  rights  of  subjects  de- 
fended, wherein  the  divine  authority  of 
our  church  establishment  and  the 
necessity  of  continuing  penalties  on  all 
dissenters  from  it,  are  demonstratively 
proved.  (In:  Baron,  R.,  ed.  Pillars  of 
priestcraft  and  orthodoxy  shaken.  1768 
3:81-107) 

NY  Y 

First    published    in     1719. 

Hoadly,   Benjamin,    1676-1761 

Common  rights  of  subjects,  defended;  and 
the  nature  of  the  sacramental  test  con- 
sider'd;  in  answer  to  the  Dean  of  Chi- 
chester's Vindication  of  the  Corpora- 
tion and  test  acts.  London,  W.  Wil- 
kins    1719  viii,303p 

TS 

Naylor,  James,  1617(?)-1660 

Memoirs  of  the  life,  ministry,  tryal  and 
sufferings  of  that  very  eminent  person 
James  Nailor,  the  Quaker's  great  apos- 
tle; who  w^as  try'd  by  the  High  court 
of  Parliament  for  blasphemy,  in  the 
year   1656.     London   1719 

For  trial  see:  Schrocder,  T.  Constitutional  free 
speech,   P280-82. 

1720-1730 

Bilton,   [Henry  of  Cheriton,  Kent] 

History  of  the  English  martyrs  who  suf- 
fered deaths  for  opposing  the  Romish 
religion,  from  1400-1558,  collected  from 
authentick  authors.     1720 

Dying  speeches  and  behavior  of  the  several 
state  prisoners  that  have  been  executed 
the  last  300  years,  with  their  several 
characters  from  the  best  historians,  as 


TS 


Cambden,  Spotswood,  Clarendon,  Sprat, 
Burnet,  etc.  .  .  .  being  a  proper  supple- 
ment to  the  state  tryals.  London,  J. 
Brotherson  &  W.  Meadows  .  .  .  1720 
49Sp 

Includes   a   number   of   speeches   from   persons 
accused   of   blasphemy   and   verbal   treason. 

Help  to  a  natural  reformation;  containing 
an  abstract  of  the  penal  laws  against 
profaneness  and  vice  .  .  .  and  a  speci- 
man  of  an  agreement  for  the  forming 
of  a  Society  for  the  reformation  of 
manners  in  any  city,  town  or  larger 
village  of  the  Kingdom  .  .  .  and  Her 
Majestie's  proclamation  for  preventing 
and  punishing  immorality  and  profane- 
ness, and  the  late  act  of  parliament 
against  prophane  swearing  and  curs- 
ing; the  fifth  edition  with  great  addi- 
tions.    London   1720 

Y 

Hoadly,  Benjamin,  1676-1761 

Answer  to  the  Reverend  Dr  Hare's  ser- 
mon, intitul'd  Church-authority  vindi- 
cated: in  which  the  texts  of  Scripture 
relating  to  this  subject  are  examin'd; 
the  doctrine  of  sincerity  is  explain'd 
and  defended;  and  several  other  impor- 
tant points  are  consider'd;  with  a  post- 
script occasion'd  by  the  Lord  Bishop 
of  Oxford's  late  charge  to  his  clergy. 
London,  J.  Knapton  &  T.  Childe  1720 
viii,276p 

TS 

Lewis,  Thomas 

The  scourge;  in  vindication  of  the  Church 
of  England,  to  which  are  added  "The 
danger  of  the  church  establishment 
from  the  insolence  of  Protestant  dis- 
senters," "The  anatomy  of  the  heretical 
synod  of  Dissenters  at  Salters-Hall." 
London   1720 

Right  way  to  shake  oflf  a  viper;  an  essay, 
upon  a  case  too  commonly  calling  for 
consideration;  what  shall  good  men  do, 
when  they  are  evil  spoken  of?  With  a 
preface  of  Increase  Mather.  2d  im- 
pression Boston,  Printed  by  S.  Knee- 
land  .  .  .   [1720?]   xiv,64p 

B    NY 

Sykes,  A[rthur]   A[shley]   1684 ?-l  756 

Authoritv  of  the  clergy  and  the  liberties 

of     the     laity     stated     and     vindicated. 

London   1720 
HCL 

Remarks  on  part  of  a  bill  lately  brought 
into  the  House  of  lords,  and  intituled, 
A  bill  for  the  more  effectual  suppres- 
sing of  blasphemy  and  profaneness;  so 
far  as  it  relates  to  the  archbishops, 
bishops  and  clergv.  London,  S.  Gray 
1721  8,14p 

NY 

[Sykes,  Arthur  Ashley]   1684?-17S6 

Letter  to  the  Right  Honourable  the  Earl 
of  Nottingham,  occasioned  by  a  late 
motion    made    by    the    Archdeacon    of 


24 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


[Sykes,  A.  A.]  — Continued 

London,  at  his  visitation  for  the  city 
clergy  to  return  their  thanks  to  his 
lordship  for  his  answer  to  Mr  Whiston. 
(In:  Baron,  R.,  cd.  Pillars  of  priest- 
craft and  orthodoxy  shaken.  1768  3: 
151-91) 

NY 

First   published   in    1721. 

Layer,   Christopher 

The  whole  proceedings  upon  the  arraign- 
ment, tryal,  conviction  and  attainder 
of,  for  high  treason  in  compassing  and 
imagining  the  death  of  the  King.  1722 
He  went  to  Rome  1721.  and  unfolded  to  the 
Pretender  a  "wondrous  plot,"  and  was  execut- 
ed   at    Tyburn. 

Report  from  the  committee  appointed  by 
the  order  of  the  House  of  commons  to 
examine  Christopher  Layer,  and  others; 
and  to  whom  several  papers  and  exam- 
inations laid  before  the  House,  relating 
to  the  conspiracy  mentioned  in  His 
Majesty's  speech  ...  to  be  carrying 
on  against  his  person  and  government, 
were  referred.  Reported  by  William 
Pulteney  .  .  .  London,  T.  Tonson,  B. 
Lintot  &  W.  Taylor   [1722]   76p 

TS 

Atterbury,  Francis,  bishop  of  Rochester, 
1662-1732 
Entire,  true,  and  genuine,  speech  of 
Francis,  late  lord  bishop  of  Rochester, 
at  the  bar  of  the  House  of  lords,  on 
Saturday  the  11th  of  Mav,  1723.  .  .  . 
London,  J.  Dodd   [1723?]   6p 

TS 

Accused  of  invitiner  French  aid  to  overthrow 
English  monarchy.  This  is  claimed  to  correct 
a  garbeled  publication  entitled:  Speech  of  Fran- 
cis   late   Lord    Bishop    of    Rochester. 

Britannicus,    pseud. 

Remarks  on  Mr  Kelly's  late  speech  at 
the  bar  of  the  House  of  lords.  Being 
a  collection  of  all  the  papers  publish'd 
in  the  London  Journal  upon  that  oc- 
casion. London,  J.  Peele  1723  22p 
TS 

George  Kelly  was  accused  of  a  treasonable 
correspondence  with  Francis,  Bishop^  of  Roch- 
ester and  seeking  to  secure  French  aid  to  over- 
throw the  British   monarch. 

Remarks  on  the  late  bishop  of  Roches- 
ter's speech  at  the  bar  of  the  House  of 
lords.  Being  a  collection  of  all  the 
papers  publish'd  in  the  London  Journal 
upon  that  occasion.  London,  J.  Peele 
1723  36p 
TS 

Bishop  of  Rochester  was  accused  of  inviting 
French   aid    to    overthrow   the    monarch. 

Collection  of  the  several  protests  in  the 
House  of  lords,  in  the  session  of 
Parliament  in  the  years  1722  and  1723 
.  .  .    London,  A.   Moore    1723  28p 

TS 

Relate  to  cases  of  George  Kelly  and  Francis, 
Bishop    of    Rochester. 

Kelly,  George,  fl.   1736 

Speech  .  .  .  spoke  at  the  bar  of  the  House 
of  lords,  on  Thursday,  the  2d  of  May, 


1723,    in    his    defence    aganst    the    bill 
then  depending,  for  inflicting  pains  and 
penalties  upon  him.     London,  A.  Moore 
1723   15p 
TS 

Phipps,  Sir  Constantine 

Defence  of  Francis,  late  Lord  Bishop  of 
Rochester,  at  the  bar  of  the  House  of 
lords,  on  Thursday  the  9th,  and  Sat- 
urday the  11th,  of  May,  1723.  Against 
the  bill  then  depending  for  inflicting 
pains  and  penalties  on  him.  London, 
J.    Bowyer   1723  20p 

TS 

Charge  was  soliciting  foreign  aid  to  over- 
throw   government. 

Presentment  of  the  grand  jury  of  the  coun- 
ty of  Middlesex  to  His  ^Majesty's 
Court  of  King's  Bench  at  Westminster, 
against  infidels  and  sodomites  and  im- 
pious books,  delivered  into  the  said 
court  the  28th  of  November  1728. 
[Annexed  to  it]  The  presentment  of 
the  grand  jury  of  the  county  of  Mid- 
dlesex to  His  Majesty's  Court  of  King's 
Bench  in  the  year  1723. 

Seasonable  apology  for  Father  Francis 
chaplain  to  Prince  Prettyman  the 
Catholic,  but  now  lying  in  durance 
under  the  suspicion  of  secret  iniquity. 
1723 

The  Father  Francis  referred  to  was  Francis 
Atterbury,  bishop  of  Rochester;  Prince  Pretty- 
man    the    Pretender. 

True  Briton.   No.   1.   Monday,  June  3,   1723 
Pages   2   and  3   devoted  to  freedom   of  speech 

and   press. 

Wharton,  Philip,   1678-1731 

His  grace,  the  Duke  of  Wharton's  speech 
in  the  House  of  lords,  on  the  third 
reading  of  the  bill  to  inflict  pains  and 
penalties  on  Francis  (late)  Lord  Bishop 
of  Rochester;  ALiy  the  15th,  1723. 
London,  F.    Warner  1723  25p 

TS 

"When  several  of  the  merchants  there  [So. 
Car.]  petitioned  [the  assembly]  against 
the  increasing  the  paper-credits,  they 
were  (without  the  knowledge  or  con- 
sent of  the  proprietors)  committed  to 
prison  and  forced  to  pay  more  than 
1000£  for  their  fees,  before  they  could 
obtain  their  discharge;  and  this  in 
the  time  of  the  present  governor  Nich- 
olson." From  The  True  Briton  July 
22.  1723 

Y 

Wynne,   William 

Defence  of  Francis,  late  Lord  Bishop  of 
Rochester,  at  the  bar  of  the  House  of 
lords,  on  Thursday  the  9th,  and  Sat- 
urday the  11th,  of  May,  1723  .  .  . 
London,  T.  Bowyer  1723  41p 
TS 

[MaudeviUe,   Bemhard,    1670-1733] 
Fable  of  the  bees:  or,  Private  vices,  pub- 
lic benefits.     With  an  essay  on  charity 
and   charity-schools   and   a   search   into 


FREE  SPEECH 


25 


TS 


the  nature  of  society — Third  edition,  to 
which  is  added  a  vindication  of  the  book 
from  the  aspersions  contained  in  a  pre- 
sentment of  the  grand-jury  of  Middle- 
sex and  an  abusive  letter  to  Lord  G. 
London,  Tonson,   1724 

This  edition  reproduces  the  presentment  of 
the  grand  jury  in  1723.  This  third  edition  with 
its  vindication  was  the  subject  of  a  present- 
ment in  1728.  See:  Schroeder,  T.  Constitu- 
tional   free    speech,    P332-4. 

Martin,   Isaac 

Tryal  and  sufferings  of  Air  Isaac  Martin, 
who  was  put  into  the  Inquisition  in 
Spain  for  the  sake  of  the  Protestant 
religion.     1724 

Dennis,  John,   1657-1734 

Stage  defended,  from  Scripture,  reason, 
experience  and  the  common  sense  of 
mankind  for  two  thousand  years  .  .  . 
London    1726   xii,34p 

Y 

Elwall,  Edward,   1676-1744 

Triumph  of  truth.  [London?  1726?] 
Same;  an  account  of  the  trial  of  E.  El- 
wall for  heresy  and  blasphemy  at  Staf- 
ford assizes;  to  which  are  added  ex- 
tracts from  William  Penn's  Sandy 
foundation  shaken.  3d  ed  London  n.d. 
24p 

HCL 

—Same.      St    Ives,   etc.    1788   12p 

HCL 

— Same.      Birmingham    1788    12p 

HCL 

— Same.     London  1791  12p 

HCL 

— Same;  being  an  account  of  the  trial  of 
Mr  Elwell  before  Judge  Deuton  for 
publishing  a  book  in  defence  of  the 
unity  of  God;  at  the  Stafford  assizes 
in  the  year  1726.  London  1816  (Printed 
for  the  Unitarian  society,  from  the 
second  edition,  there  having  been  a 
prior   third   edition.) 

For  brief  account  see:  Schroeder,  T.  Con- 
stitutional  free   speech,   P334-37. 

Law,  William,  1686-1761 

Absolute  unlawfulness  of  the  stage-en- 
tertainment fullv  demonstrated.  Lon- 
don,   1726   SOp 

—Same.     2d  ed  London   1726  SOp 
Y 

-Same.      4th    ed    London,    J.    Richardson 

1759  56p 
B  LC 
— Same.      6th    ed    London,    Robinson    1773 

56p 


Locke,  John.   1632-1704 

Works  of  John  Locke  .  .  .  3d  ed  London, 
Printed   for   .\.    Bettesworth    1727   3v 
LC  Y 
— Same.     4th  ed  London  1740  3v 


Works  .  .  .  10th  ed  London  [1753] -1801 
8v 

Y 

Works  .  .  .  12th  ed  London  1824  9v 

Philomusus,  S. 

Mr  Law's  unlawfulness  of  the  stage  ex- 
amined.     1726 

Short  account  of  the  lives  and  sufferings 
of  several  Godly  people  who  dy'd  in 
England  for  the  sake  of  the  gospel 
under  Henry  VIII  and  Mary.  An  ac- 
count of  the  sufferings  of  the  perse- 
cuted Protestants  in  Saltzburg,  with 
their  confession  of  faith,     n.p.     1727-32 

Manlius  capitolinus;or,  Roman  justice,  in 
the  case  of  calumny,  offcr'd  to  the  con- 
sideration of  all  lovers  of  their  coun- 
try; as  also  to  the  patrons  and  pro- 
moters of  obloquv  and  faction.  Lon- 
don. A.   Moore   1728  3-31p 

Collins,  Anthony,   1676-1729 

Dissertation  on  liberty  and  necessitv. 
London   1729  23p 

Disney,  John.  1677-1730 

View  of  the  ancient  laws  against  im- 
morality and   profaneness.      Cambridge 

TS 

Parts   first  printed   in    1708   and    1710. 

Jones,  Jonathan 

Instructions  of  Richard,  bishop  of  St 
David's,  in  defence  of  religious  liberty 
London    [1729?]  nuerry. 

HCL  ^ 

Letter  to  Mr  D'Anvers  concerning  the  lib- 
erty of  the  press.  London,  Printed  for 
I.    Roberts    1729  24p 

TS 

Written  to  vindicate  it  [liberty  of  pre<;sl 
from  some  injuries  and  abuses  perfectly  agree- 
able  to      Mr.   D'Anvers." 

Smalbroke,  Richard 

Defence   of  the   bishop   of  St   David's   in 

f^^X'^^J'^   *°    Jonathan    Jones.      London 
1/29  40p 
HCL 


1730-174P 

[Tindal,  Matthew]    1657P-1733 

Christianity  as  old  as  creation;  or,  The 
gospel,  a  republication  of  the  religion 
of   nature,     v    1    London    1730  viii,432p 

Largely  a  defence  of  use  of  reason  in  re- 
ligion   and   a   defense   of   liberty   of   prophesying. 

The  second  volume  contained  replies  to  crit- 
ics Its  publication  was  prevented  by  Gibson, 
bishop  of   London. 

For  short  account  of  Tindal's  conflict  with 
the  law  see  Schroeder,  T.  Constitutional  free 
speech,   P324-31. 

Blasphemy  as  old  as  the  creation;  or,  The 
Ne\ygate  divine  ...  a  satyr  [in  verse, 
against  M.  Tindal]  by  a  gentleman 
and  a  Christian.     [1730] 

Anvers,   Caleb   d',   pseud,   of  William   Pul- 
teney.  earl  of  Bath.   1682-1764 
Proper    reply    to    a    late    scurrilous    libel 
entitled    Sedition    and    defamation    dis- 


26 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Anvers,  Caleb  d'  — Continued 

played;  in  a  letter  to  the  author  [i.e. 
Sir  William  Yonge].  London,  R. 
Francklain    1731   20p 

Y 

Limborch,    Philip 

A  history  of  the  Inquisition.  Translated 
into  English  by  Samuel  Chandler,  with 
an  introduction  concerning  the  rise  and 
progress  of  persecution,  and  real  and 
tended  causes  of  it.  London,  Sold  by 
J.    Gray   1731 

Saint- John,    Henry,    viscount    Bolingbroke, 

1678-1751 
Final  answer  to  the  Remarks  on  the 
Craftsman's  vindication,  and  to  all  the 
libels,  which  have  come,  or  may  come 
from  the  same  quarter  against  the 
person,  last  mentioned  in  the  Craftsman 
of  the  22d  of  May.  London.  R.  Franck- 
lin  1731  32p 
NY 

Craftsman's  doctrine  and  practice  of  the 
liberty  of  the  press,  explained  to  the 
meanest  capacitv.  London,  Printed  for 
F.   Roberts    1732    [5]-61p 

B  NY  TS  Y 

This  is  a  supplement  to:  The  case  of  opposi- 
tion stated,  between  the  Craftsman  and  the 
people.  Gives  specific  cases  of  suppression  of 
publishers,  and  names  of  books  and  papers 
prosecuted. 

[Hoadly,  Benjamin]  bishop  of  Winchester, 

1676-1761 
True  churchman's  reasons  for  repealing 
the  Corporation  and  test  acts,  as  they 
now  stand  a  necessary  qualification 
for  civil  and  military  offices;  with  an 
humble  proposal  for  making  a  proper 
test  in  the  room  thereof.  (In:  Baron, 
R.,  ed.  Pillars  of  priestcraft  and  ortho- 
doxy shaken.  1768  3:129-48) 
B  NY 

First  published  in   1732. 
Neal,  Daniel 

History  of  the  Puritans,  or  Protestant 
non-conformists;  from  the  Reformation 
in  1517  to  the  death  of  Queen 
Elizabeth,  with  an  account  of  their 
principles;  their  attempts  for  a  further 
reformation  in  the  church;  their  suffer- 
ings and  the  lives  and  character  of 
their  considerable  divines.  London  1732 
4v 

Anderson,   George,    1676  ?-l  756 

Use  and  abuse  of  diversions:  a  sermon, 
with  an  appendix  shewing  that  the 
stage  in  particular  is  an  unchristian  di- 
version. Edinburgh,  Fleming  &  co. 
1733  S9p 

B 

Reinforcement  of  the  reasons  proving 
that  the  stage  is  an  unchristian  diver- 
sion; or,  A  vindication  of  the  Appen- 
dix to  the  use  and  abuse  of  diversions: 
a  sermon.  In  answer  to  the  remarks 
of  an  anonymous  author.  Edinburgh, 
M'Erien?  1733  140p 
B 


Lemercier,  Andrew,   d.    1762 

Treatise    against    detraction,    in    ten    sec- 
tions.    Boston,  Henchman  1733  303p 
B 

Right    of   British    subjects    to   petition   and 
apply  to  their  representatives,  assorted 
and    vindicated    in    a    letter    to    *****. 
London,   M.   Smith    1733  30p 
TS 

— Same;  with  excerpt  from  the  Review  of 
the  excise-scheme,  etc.,  on  the  study 
of  members  of  Parliament  to  advise 
their  constituents;  and  an  address  to 
the  people  of  Scotland  on  the  same 
heads,  n.p.  1734  lxxxii,40p 
NY 
Bayle,  Pierre,  1647-1706 

Historical     and     critical     dictionary.     5v 
2d   ed   carefully   collated   with   the   sev- 
eral  editions   of  the   original.     London, 
J.  J.  and  P.   Knappen   1734;   v5    1738 
TS 

All  through  these  volumes  are  solicitations 
and  arguments  for  toleration  of  various  heretics. 
These  brought  the  author  into  difficulty  and 
prompted  him  to  write  several  defensive  essays 
which  are  attached  to  this  edition  as  follows: 
published  in  vol.  V.  (a)  A  dissertation  concern- 
ing the  book  of  Stephanus  Junius  Brutus  printed 
in  the  year  1579,  p73i-42._  This  dissertation 
deals  with  the  book:  Vindiciae  contra  tyrannos, 
sive  de  principis  in  populum,  populique  in  princi- 
pem  legitima  potestate.  (b.)  A  dissertation  con- 
cerning defamatory  libels,  on  occasion  of  a  pas- 
sage from  Tacitus.  *  *  *  P743-6S.  This  contains 
much  unusual  data  especially  of  ancient  history, 
(c.)  An  explanation  concerning  things  dispersed  in 
this  dictionary,  which  may  be  reduced  to  four 
general  heads:  i.  The  praises  bestowed  on  per- 
sons who  denied  either  the  providence  or  the 
existance  of  God.  2.  The  objections  of  the 
Manichees.  3.  The  objections  of  the  skeptics.  4. 
Obscenities.  p8io-s8.  These  defenses  are  con- 
structed by  an  unusual  mind  with  an  unusual 
psychologic  insight.  The  "Explanation  concern- 
ing obscenities"  is  republished  in:  Schroeder, 
T.   Free  press   anthology,   pi  14-48.    1909. 

Collins,  A[nthony?] 

Discourses  concerning  religion  and  gov- 
ernment,     n.p.    1734 

Poree,   Charles 

An  oration,  in  which  an  enquiry  is  made 
whether  the  stage  is,  or  can  be  made  a 
school  for  forming  the  mind  to  virtue 
...  tr.  into  English  by  I.  Lockman. 
London   1734  lllp 

Y 

Religious,  rational  and  moral  conduct  of 
Matthew  Tindal,  LL.  D.,  late  fellow  of 
All  Souls  college  in  Oxford,  in  a  letter 
to  a  friend,  by  a  member  of  the  same 
college.      London    1735    65p 

[Arnall,  William] 

Complaint  of  the  children  of  Israel,  rep- 
resenting their  grievances  under  the 
penal  laws;  and  praying,  that  if  the 
tests  are  repealed,  the  Tews  may  have 
the  benefit  of  this  indulgence  in  com- 
mon with  all  other  subjects  of  Eng- 
land ...  by  Solomon  Abrabaniel  .  .  . 
(In:  Baron,  R.,  ed.  Pillars  of  priest- 
craft and  orthodoxy  shaken.  1768  4: 
175-208) 
NY 

First  published  in   1736. 


FREE  SPEECH 


27 


Three  important  questions  fairly  debated, 
viz.,  whether  any  man  may  chusc  his 
own  religion,  etc.  by  a  layman  and  sin- 
cere lover  of  truth.     London  1736 

HCL 

[Collins,  Anthony]  1676-1729 
Discourse  of  the  grounds  and  reasons 
of  the  Christian  religion  ...  to  which 
is  prefixed  an  apology  for  free  debate 
and  liberty  of  writing.  London  1737 
liv,247p 

NY  Y 

HUdrop,  J. 

Letter  to  a  member  of  Parliament  con- 
taining a  proposal  for  bringing  in  a 
bill  to  revise,  amend  or  repeal  certain 
obsolete  statutes  commonly  called  the 
ten  commandments.  3d  ed  London 
1738  60p 

NYSL 

Indus  Britannicus 

Remarks  on  the  trial  of  John  Peter 
Zenger.  [London,  Printed  for  J.  Wil- 
ford  1738  27p] 

Mather,  Samuel 

Apology  for  the  liberties  of  the  churches 
in  New  England;  to  which  is  prefix'd  a 
discourse  concerning  congregational 
churches.    Boston  1738 

Zenger,  John  Peter,  1680P-1746 

Tryal  of  John  Peter  Zenger,  of  New- 
York,  who  was  lately  try'd  and  acquit- 
ted for  printing  and  publishing  a  libel 
against  the  government;  with  the 
pleadings  and  arguments  on  both  sides. 
London,  J.  Wilford  1738  32p 

B    NY 

— Same.     London,  P.  Brown  1752  76p 

—Same.     London,  J.  Wilford  1759  60p 

"The  trial  of  Zenger  [in  N.Y.]  1735  was  the 
germ  of  American  freedom,  the  morning  star 
of  that  liberty  which  subsequently  revolutionized 
America."  Governor  Morris.  For  list  of  18 
editions    of    this    trial,    see    edition    of    1904. 

— and  Owen,  William 

Same;  to  which  is  now  added,  the  trial 
of  W.  Owen,  near  Tcmplc-Bar,  also 
charged  with  the  publication  of  a  libel 
against  the  government.  London,  J. 
Almon  1765  59p 
B 

The  Gentleman's  Museum,  printed  for  J. 
Payne,  London,  1763,  contains  a  Report  of  the 
trial  of  Zenger,  pages  78  to  118.  Trial  reported 
in:    Howell's    State   trials,    P675-764. 

Chauncy,  Charles,  1705-1787 

Only  compulsion  proper  to  be  made  use 
of  in  the  affairs  of  conscience  and  re- 
ligion;  a  sermon.     Boston   1739 

HCL 

Fleming,  Caleb,  1698-1779 

Delays  dangerous:  no  tomorrow  for   the 
repeal  of  the  Test  and  corporation  acts. 
[Anon]    London,   Farmer   1739  36p 
B 


1740-1750 

Harmony  without  uniformity;  being  a  philo- 
sophical defence  of  liberty  and  charity. 
London   1740 

HCL 

[Squire,  Francis] 

Faithful  report  of  a  genuine  debate  con- 
cerning liberty  of  the  press,  addressed 
to  a  candidate  at  the  ensuing  election, 
wherein  a  sure  and  safe  method  is  pro- 
posed of  restraining  the  abuse  of  that 
liberty,  without  the  least  encroachment 
upon  the  rights  and  privileges.  Lon- 
don, J.  Roberts  1740  58p 

NY  TS 

— Same.  2d  ed  London,  T.  Beckert  &  P. 
A.  De  Hondt  1764  45p 

NY 

Whitfield,  George 

Persecution  the  Christian's  lot;  a  sermon 
preached  .  .  .  September  14th,  1741  .  .  . 
upon  2  Timothy,  3:12.  Glasgow,  Gal- 
lowgate  printing  house   1741 

Only    to    prove    scripturally    that    persecution 
is  inevitable. 

Vindication  of  a  book,  intituled,  a  brief 
account  of  many  of  the  prosecutions  of 
the  people  called  Quakers,  etc.,  pre- 
sented to  the  members  of  both  Houses 
of  Parliament,  in  answer  to  a  late  ex- 
amination thereof,  so  far  as  the  clergy 
of  the  diocese  of  Canterbury  are  con- 
cerned in  it;  with  an  appendix  demon- 
strating, that  tithes  are  an  oppression 
to  the  husband-man,  a  burden  too  heavy 
for  him  to  bear,  and  undoeth  many. 
1742 

Williams,  EUsha,   1694-1755 

Essential  rights  and  liberties  of  Protes- 
tants; a  seasonable  plea  for  the  liberty 
of  conscience,  and  the  rights  of  private 
judgment  in  matters  of  religion;  being 
a  letter  from  a  gentleman  in  ^lassachu- 
setts-Bay  to  his  friend  in  Connecticut. 
Boston,  Kneeland  &  G.     1744  66p 

B  Y 

Cosin,  James 

Names  of  the  Roman  Catholics,  non- 
jurors, and  others,  who  refused  to  take 
the  oaths  to  King  George,  with  their 
titles,  places  of  abode,  parishes  where 
their  lands  lay,  the  names  of  the  then 
tenants,  or  occupiers  thereof;  and  the 
annual  valuation  of  them,  as  estimated 
by  themselves,  transmitted  to  the  late 
commissioners  for  the  forfeited  estates 
of  England  .  .  .  n.p.  1745  Reprinted 
1862 

Waeyen,  Guilielmus   Didericus  van  der 
De    poena    criminis    blasphemiae.      Lug- 
duni  Batavorum   1746   16p 

NY 

Lombard,  Daniel 

Succinct  history  of  ancient  and  modern 
persecutions;  together  with  a  short  es- 
say on  assinations  and  civil  wars.  Lon- 
don  1747  192p 

NYSL 


28 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Lovat,   Simon   Fraser 

Trial    of    Simon,    Lord    Lovat    for    high 

treason  in  Westminster  Hall.     1747 
Whole  proceedings  in  the  House  of  Peers 
upon  the  impeachment,  for  high  treason 
[i.e.,  becoming  party  to  a  plot  in  favour 
of  the  Young  Pretender.]      1747 

Priest  gelded;  or.  Popery  at  the  last  gasp, 
showing  the  absolute  necessity  of  pas- 
sing a  law^  for  the  castration  of  popish 
ecclesiastics  in  Great  Brtiain,  with  a 
list  of  seminaries.     1747  36p 

Enquiry  into  the  behaviour  of  our  great 
churchmen  since  the  Reformation,  in 
the  enacting  and  executing  of  penal 
laws  against  Papists  and  Protestant 
dissenters.  (In:  Baron,  R.,  ed.  Pillars 
of  priestcraft  and  orthodoxy  shaken. 
1768   4:211-44) 

NY 

First  published  in    1748- 

Knowles 

Libel  suit  of  Knowles  v.  Douglass,  1748 
and  1749.  [Reprinted  from  the  Publi- 
cations of  the  Colonial  society  of  Mass., 
V.    Ill]    Cambridge    1899  31p 

HCL 

Wesley,  John 

Brief  account  of  ...  a  late  tryal  at 
Gloucester,  3rd  March,  1743,  extracted 
from  Mr  Whiteficld's  letter.  2d  ed 
1748 

Ames,  Joseph 

Typographical  antiquities:  being  an  his- 
torical account  of  printing  in  England: 
with  some  memoirs  of  our  antient 
printers,  and  a  register  of  the  books 
printed  by  them,  from  the  year  MCCCC- 
LXXI  to  the  year  MDC;  with  an  ap- 
pendix concerning  printing  in  Scotland 
and  Ireland  to  the  same  time.  London, 
J.   Robinson   1749 

Pages    509    and    510    give    "An    act    abolishing 
and   putting   away   divers    books   and   images." 

Braght,  T[ielemann]    J[ans]    V[an] 

Blutige  schau-platz  oder  martyrer  spiegel 
der  tauffs-gesinten  oder  Wehrlosen- 
Christen,  die  um  des  zeugnuss  Jesu 
ihres  seligmachers  willen  gelitten  haben, 
und  seynd  getodtet  worden,  von  Christi 
zeit  an  bis  auf  das  jahr  1660'  .  .  .  vor- 
mals  ...  in  Hollandischer  sprach 
herausgegeben  .  .  .  nun  .  .  .  ins  hoch- 
tcutsche  iibersetzt.  Ephrata  in  Pensyl- 
vanicn,  Drucks  und  verlags  der  briider- 
schafift  1748-49  56,  478p 

Consilium  theologicum,  quibus  mediis  verbo 
Dei  consentaneis  ditioni  alcui  consuli 
possit,  ut,  quoad  rcligionem  subditi 
tam  qui  catholici,  quam  qui  reformatae 
religionis  vocantur,  in  pace  vivant. 
(Gerdes.  Scrinium  antiquarium.  Gron- 
ingee    [1749-1765]    l:431-50p) 

B 

[Luzac,  Elias]   1723-1796 
Essai  sur  la  liberte  de  produire  ses  senti- 
mens.     1749   124p 
NY 


1750-1760 

Gordon,  Thomas,  1684P-1750 

Cordial    for   low    spirits;    being   a   collec- 
tion of  tracts.     1750  3v;  3d  ed  by  Rich- 
ard   Baron    1763   3v 
Besse,  Joseph 

Collection  of  the  sufferings  of  the  people 
called  Quakers,  for  the  testimony,  of  a 
good  conscience.   London   1753  2v 
Vassall,  William 

Massachusetts  Bay — Superior  court 
(1757);  State  of  the  action  brought  by 
William  Fletcher  against  William  Vas- 
sall for  defaming  him;  tried  in  the  Su- 
perior court  at  Boston  .  .  .  1752  .  .  . 
Boston   1753  39p 

HCL 

Leland,  John,  1691-1766 

View  of  deistical  writers  that  have  ap- 
peared in  England  in  the  last  and  pres- 
ent  century.     London    1754-56 

Blacow,  R. 

Letter  to  W.  King,  LL.D.,  containing  a 
particular  account  of  the  treasonable 
riot  at  Oxford,  in  Feb.   1747.     1755  48p 

Fowle,   Daniel,   1715-1787 

Total  eclipse  of  liberty:  being  a  true 
and  faithful  account  of  the  arraignment, 
and  examination  of  Daniel  Fowle  be- 
fore the  honorable  House  of  repre- 
sentatives of  the  province  of  the  Mas- 
sachusetts-Bay in  New-England,  Octob. 
24th  1754,  barely  on  suspicion  of  his 
being  concern'd  in  printing  and  publish- 
ing a  pamphlet,  intitlcd,  The  monster 
of  monsters.  Also  his  imprisonment 
and  sufferings.  .  .  .  Boston,  Printed  [by 
D.   Fowle]    in  the  year  1755  32p 

BU  JCB  LC  NY  Y 

— Appendix  to  the  late  Total  eclipse  of 
liberty:  being  some  thoughts  on  the 
end  and  design  of  civil  government  .  .  . 
Boston   [D.  Fowle]    1756  24p 

LC  NY 

[Hayter,  Thomas]    1702-1762 

Essay  on  the  liberty  of  the  press,  chiefly 
as  it  respects  a  personal  slander.  Lon- 
don, J.  Raymond  n.d.  47p 

— Same.     2d   ed   London,   J.   Raymond   1755 

NY  TS 

Address  to  the  ladies  on  the  indecency  of 
appearing  at   immodest   plays.      1756 

Bolles,  John 

To  worship  God  in  spirit  and  in  truth  is 
the  true  liberty  of  conscience.     1756 

Zenger,  John  Peter,  1680?-1746 

Brief  narrative  of  the  case  and  trial  of 
John  Peter  Zenger,  printer  of  the  New- 
York  Weekly  Journal  New-York, 
printed;  Lancaster,  re-printed,  and  sold 
by  W.  Dunlap,  at  the  New-printing 
office,  in  Queen-street   1756  39p 

LC 

Baron,   Richard 

(ed.)  Pillars  of  priestcraft  and  orthodoxy 
shaken.    London  1757  2v 
HCL 


FREE  SPEECH 


29 


—Same.  2d  cd  London,  Cadell,  Kearsley, 
Payne,  Johnson  &  Young  1768  4v 

HCL  NY 

Bower,  Archibald,   1686-1766 

Mr  Bower's  answer  to  a  scurrilous  pam- 
phlet,   intituled    [sic]    Six    letters    from 

A d   B.  .  .  .r  to   Father  Sheldon 

.  .    Part    1    London,    William    Sandby 
1757  132p 

NY  Y 

Mr  Bower's  answer  to  a  new  charge 
brought  against  him  in  a  libel  intituled 
[sic]  Bower  and  Tillomont.  [By  J. 
Douglas]   London,  W.  Sandby  1757  27p 

NY  Y 

Mr  Bower's  reply  to  a  scurrilous  libel 
intituled  [sic]  A  full  confutation,  etc. 
[By  T.  Douglas]  London,  William 
Sandby  1757  55p 

NY 

Second  part  of  Mr  Bower's  Answer  to  a 
scurrilous  pamphlet,  etc.,  with  remarks 
on  the  six  letters,  proving  them  to  be 
forged.  London,  William  Sandby  1757 
33p 

NY 

Collection  of  the  acts  of  Parliament,  and 
clauses  of  acts  of  Parliament,  relative 
to  those  Protestant  dissenters  who  are 
usually  called  by  the  name  of  Quakers 
from  the  year  1688.  London,  Luke 
Hinde  1757 

Fumeaux,  Philip,   1726-1783 

Letters  to  the  Honourable  Mr  Justice 
Blackstone,  concerning  his  exposition 
of  the  act  of  toleration  and  some  posi- 
tions relative  to  religious  liberty  in  his 
celebrated  Commentaries  on  the  laws 
of  England.  London,  T.  Cadell  1757 
xv,166p 

NY  TS 

—Same.     2d  ed  Philadelphia  1773 

Y 

— Same.  2d  ed  with  additions  and  an  ap- 
pendix, containing  authentic  copies  of 
the  argument  of  the  late  Honourable 
Mr  Justice  Foster  in  the  court  of  Judges 
delegates  and  of  the  speech  of  the 
Right  Honourable  Lord  Mansfield  in 
the  House  of  Lords,  in  the  cause 
between  the  city  of  London  and  the 
Dissenters.      London,   T.   Cadell   1771 

Much  quoted  in   Schroeder,   T.     Constitutional 
free   speech. 

Another  edition,  Philadelphia,   i773.  deals  with 
religious    liberty,    blasphemy    and    Test    acts. 

Free,  John,  D.D. 

Whole  speech  to  the  clergy  of  London, 
8  May.  1759,  at  Sion  College.     36p 

Prefixed    is    a    remonstrance    complaining    of 
persecution    from    the    Methodists. 

Rousseau,  Jean  Jacques,   1712-1778 

Letter  from  AL  Rousseau,  of  Geneva,  to 
AL  d'.Membert,  of  Paris,  concerning 
the  effects  of  theatrical  entertainments 
on  the  manners  of  mankind;  translated. 
[London]    Nourse  1759  xii,190p 

B  NY 


1760-1770 

The  Protestant;  or,  The  doctrine  of  univer- 
sal liberty  asserted  in  opposition  to  Dr 
Lowth's  representation  of  it,  in  his  late 
celebrated    letter.      London    [176-]    54p 

HCL 

[Wilkes,  John]  1727-1797 
Authentick  account  of  the  proceedings 
against  John  Wilkes,  esq contain- 
ing all  the  papers  relative  to  this  inter- 
esting affair  .  .  .  with  an  abstract  of 
that  precious  jewel  of  an  Englishman, 
the  habeas  corpus  act;  addressed  to  all 
lovers  of  liberty.  London,  J.  Williams 
[176-]  39p 

NY 

Bolles,  John 

Relation  of  the  opposition  some  Baptist 
people  met  at  Norwich  [Conn.]  in 
1761 

Wolcott,   Roger,    1679-1767 

New  England  Congregational  churches 
are  and  always  have  been  associated 
churches  and  their  liberties  greater 
and  better  founded,  in  their  platform 
of  church  discipline  agreed  to  at  Cam- 
bridge 1648,  than  what  is  contained  at 
Saybrook,   1705.     Boston   1761 

Attempt  to  establish  a  play-house  in  New 
Hampshire,  1762.  [Petitions  for  and 
against  the  project,  and  the  Assembly's 
address  to  prevent  acting  plays.]  (New 
Hampshire  hist.  soc.  coll.  v  5)  Con- 
cord,  N.H.   1837  247-50p 

B 

Palladium  of  Great  Britain  and  Ireland; 
or.  Historical  strictures  of  liberty,  from 
before  the  Reformation  to  the  present 
times.     London    1762 

HCL 

Brown,  J[ohn,  Vicar  of  Newcastle 

On  religious  liberty;  a  sermon.  London 
1763 

HCL 

Kidgell,  John 

Narrative  of  a  libel:  Essay  on  woman, 
[by  John  Wilkes]  Gentlemen's  Maga- 
zine  1763  p526 

Wilkes     had     been     prosecuted     for     "obscene 
blasphemy." 

Letter  to  Rt  Hon  the  Earls  of  Egremont 
and  Halifax  ...  on  the  seizure  of 
papers.     London,   T.  \\'illiams   1763  31p 

NY 

Observations  upon  the  authority,  manner 
and  circumstances  of  the  apprehension 
and  confinement  of  Mr  Wilkes;  ad- 
dressed to  free-born  Englishmen.  Lon- 
don, T.  Williams  1763  36p 

NY 

Voltaire,  Frangois  Marie  Arouet  de,   1694- 
1778 
Traite   sur   la   tolerance    [a   I'occasion   de 
la   mort   de    Jean    Calas.]      [A    Geneve, 
aux  depens  de  I'auteur.]     1763  183p 

B 


30 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Wilkes,  John,  1727-1797 

Essay  on  woman,  and  other  pieces,  .  .  . 
printed  at  his  private  press  in  1763, 
[and  now  reproduced  in  facsimile  from 
a  copy  believed  to  be  unique.]  Pri- 
vately  printed,    1871 

This  was  the  basis  of  one  of  the  prosecutions 
against    Wilkes. 

[Almon,   John]    1737-1805 

Enquiry  into  the  doctrine  lately  propa- 
gated, concerning  libels,  warrants,  and 
the  seizure  of  papers;  with  a  view  to 
some  late  proceedings,  and  the  defence 
of  them  by  the  majority;  upon  the 
principles  of  law  and  tlie  Constitution; 
in  a  letter  to  Mr  Almon  from  the 
Father  of  Candor  .  .  .  London,  Printed 
for  J.  Almon   1764  135p 

LC  NY  Y 

Letter  concerning  libels,  warrants,  and 
the  seizure  of  papers;  with  a  view  of 
some  late  proceedings,  and  the  defence 
of  them  by  the  majority.  2d  ed  much 
improved  .  .  .  London,  Printed  for  J. 
Almon    1764   [5]-100p 

LC  NY 

— Same.  With  a  postcript  .  .  .  and  addi- 
tions to  the  second  edition  to  which 
all  the  pages  mentioned  refer.  4th  ed 
London   1765   112,  9,   16p 

NY  Y 

— Same.  5th  ed,  enl  and  improved.  Lon- 
don, J.  Almon  1765   112p 

B  NY 

— Same;  with  a  postcript  and  an  appendix. 
7th  ed   London,  J.   Almon   1771    164p 

NY 

Authorship  disputed;  usually  ascribed  to  John 
Almon. 

Candor,    pseud. 

Letter  from  Candor  to  the  Public  adver- 
tiser: containing  a  series  of  constitu- 
tional remarks  on  some  late  interesting 
trials,  and  other  noints,  of  the  most 
essential  consequence  to  civil  liberty 
.  .  .  ;  the  2d  ed,  printed  from  a  more; 
legible  copy,  in  which  are  many  mate- 
rial additions.  London,  Printed  for  J. 
Almon  1764  54p 

LC  NY  Y 

—Same.     3d  ed  London,  J.  Almon  1770  40p 

NY  Y 

Conduct  of  the  administration  in  the  pros- 
ecution of  Mr  Wilkes.  London,  J. 
Wilkie  1764  31p 

NY 

Lloyd,  Charles,  1735-1773 

Defence  of  the  majority  in  the  House  of 
commons,  on  the  question  relating  to 
general  warrants,  in  answer  to  the  De- 
fence of  the  minority  [by  C.  Town- 
shend].     London   1764  52p 

—Same.     2d  ed  London,  J.  Wilkie  1765  66p 
NY  TS  Y 

Martin,  Philipp  Joseph 

Dissertatis  posterior  inauguralis  publico- 
ecclesiastica  de  eo,   quod  circa  liberta- 


tem  exercitii  religionis  ex  lege  imperii 
justum  est,  quam,  una  cum  corollariis 
ex  utroque  jure  illustratis.  Wirceburg 
1764 

HCL 

[Meredith,  William]   d.   1790 
Reply  to  the  defence  of  the  majority  by 
[C.  Lloyd],  on  the  question  relating  to 
general    warrants.      London,    J.    Almon 
1764  48p 

NY  Y 

[Towers,  Joseph]  1737-1799 
An  enquiry  into  the  question,  whether 
juries  are,  or  are  not,  judges  of  law, 
as  well  as  of  fact;  with  a  particular 
reference  to  the  case  of  libels  .  .  . 
London,  Printed  for  J.  Wilkie  1764 
vii,  9-31p 

Y 

[Townshend,  Charles]    1725-1767 

Defence  of  the  minority  in  the  House  of 
commons,  on  the  question  relating  to 
general   warrants.      London,    J.    Almon 

1764  38p 
NY   Y 

— Same  [with  a  postscript.]  2d  ed  London, 
T.  Almon  1764 

NY  Y 

— Same.     5th  ed 

NY 

[Almon,  John]  1737-1805 
Postscript  to  the  letter  on  libels,  war- 
rants, etc.  in  answer  to  a  postscript  in 
the  defence  of  the  majority;  and  an- 
other pamphlet,  entitled,  Considerations 
on  the  legality  of  general  warrants. 
London,  J.  Almon  1765  9p 

NY 

[Brown,  John]   1715-1766 

Thoughts  on  civil  liberty,  on  licentious- 
ness   and    faction.      London,    L.    Davis 

1765  168p 
NY  Y 

— Same.     2d  ed  London,  L.   Davis   1765 

TS 

Bunyan,  John 

A  relation  of  the  imprisonment  of  Mr 
John  Bunyan,  minister  of  the  Gospel 
at  Bedford,  in  November,  1660.  London 
1765 

Considerations  on  the  legality  of  general 
warrants.  London,  W.  Nicoll  1765 
48p 

TS 

— Same;  to  which  is  added  a  postscript  on 
a  late  pamphlet  concerning  juries, 
libels,  etc.  2d  ed  London,  W.  Nicoll 
1765   50p 

NY  Y 

Digest  of  the  law  concerning  libels;  con- 
taining all  the  resolutions  in  the  books 
on  the  subject,  and  many  manuscript 
cases,  the  whole  illustrated  with  occas- 
ional observations;  by  a  gentleman  of 
the  Inner  Temple.  London,  Owen 
1765 

HCL 


FREE  SPEECH 


31 


Holly,  Israel 

Plea  in  Zion's  behalf:  the  censured 
memorial  made  public  ...  to  which  is 
added  a  few  brief  remarks  upon  .  .  . 
an  act  for  exempting  .  .  .  separatists 
from  taxes.     1765 

Law  of  libels  containing  among  other  in- 
teresting and  important  matters, 
[then  follows  a  page  of  condensed 
contents.]  London,  Printed  and  sold 
by  M.  Thrush,  at  the  King's-arms,  in 
Salisbury   court    1765   304p 

Locke,  John,   1632-1704 

Letters    concerning    toleration.      London, 

Printed  for  A.  Miller,  H.  Woodfall,  etc. 

1765  399p 
Y 

Oppression;  a  poem  by  an  American,  with 
notes  by  a  North  Briton.  London  1765 
21p 

NY 

Warburton,  William 

Divine   legation   of  Moses   demonstrated. 
4th   cd  London,  A.  Millar   1765  5v 
TS 

Volume    I,    P27    and    33    contain    remarks    on 
toleration. 

Zenger,  John  Peter,  1680P-1746,  and  Owen, 
William 

Trial  of  J.  P.  Zenger,  of  New  York, 
charged  with  having  printed  and  pub- 
lished a  libel  against  the  government. 
Added,  the  trial  of  W.  Owen,  near 
Temple-Bar,  also  charged  with  the  pub- 
lication of  a  libel  against  the  govern- 
ment.    London,  J.  Almon  1765  59p 

[BoUan,  William]   d.  1776 

Freedom  of  speech  and  writing  upon  pub- 
lic afTairs,  considered;  with  an  historical 
view  of  the  Roman  imperial  laws 
against  libels  .  .  .  the  bringing  of  the 
rack  into  the  Tower  .  .  .  the  different 
treatment  of  libels  there  .  .  .  with 
observations  on  the  proper  use  of  the 
liberty  of  the  press  .  .  .  London,  S. 
Baker  1766  160p 

B  LC  NY 

— Same;  extract  from  entitled:  Succinct 
view  of  the  origin  of  our  colonies,  with 
their  civil  state,  founded  by  Queen 
Elizabeth  .  .  .  whereby  the  nature  of 
the  empire  established  in  America  and 
the  errors  of  various  hypothesis 
formed  thereupon,  may  be  clearly 
understood.     London   1766 

JCB 

Holm,  Ad. 

Diss.  acad.  [prass.  Petr.  Ekerman],  de 
censura  et  indice  Hbrorum  prohibitorum 
expurgatorio,  apud  Romanenses.  P.  L 
Upsaliae,  apud  joh.   Edman   [1767]   22p 


Martin,  Samuel 

Dissertation  on  the  nature,  effects  and 
consequences  of  the  blasphemy  of  the 
Holy  Ghost;  to  which  is  added,  a  re- 
view of  the  reasonings  in  Monsieur 
Bayle,  on  the  entrance  of  sin  and 
misery  into  the  world;  and  on  the 
method  prescribed  by  him  for  conduct- 
ing this  dispute  with  a  Manichean. 
1767 

[Flitcroft,  H.] 
Theatrical  entertainments  consistent  with 

society,      morality      and    religion      .  .  • 

London   1768  ix,32p 
Y 

Klotz,   Jo[hann   Christian] 

M  lo.  Christiani  Klotzii  ...  De  libris 
auctoribus  suis  fatalibus  liber  singu- 
laris.  Lipsiae,  Ex  ofificina  Langen- 
hemia   1768  205p 

LC  NY 

National  debt  no  national  grievance;  or, 
The  real  state  of  the  nation  with  re- 
spect to  its  civil  and  religious  liberty, 
commerce,  public  credit  and  finances. 
1768 

Nowell,  Thomas,   1730-1801 

Answer  to  a  pamphlet  entitled  Pietas 
Oxoniensis;  or,  A  full  and  impartial 
account  of  the  expulsion  of  six  students 
from  St  Edmunds  Hall,  Oxford;  in  a 
letter  to  the  author.  Oxford,  Claren- 
don   press    1768 

Priestley,  Joseph,  1733-1804 

Essay  on  the  first  principles  of  govern- 
ment and  on  the  nature  of  political, 
civil  and  religious  liberty.  London 
1768 

HCL 

— Same;  including  remarks  on  Dr  Brown's 
code  of  education,  and  on  Dr  Balguy's 
sermon  on  church  authority.  2d  ed 
London.  Printed  for  J.  Johnson  1771 
[v]-xvi,300p 

LC  HCL 

Stage  the  high  road  to  hell:  being  an  essay 
on  the  pernicious  nature  of  theatrical 
entertainments;  shewing  them  to  be  at 
once  inconsistent  with  religion,  and 
subversive  of  morality  etc.  London, 
NicoU    [1768?]   43p 

B  Y 

Sweden.  Riksens  Rad 

Protocollcr,  innehallande  berattelse  om 
rikcts  nuwarande  tilstand  samt  anmark- 
ningar  ofwer  atskillige  af  tryckct  ut 
komme  forforiska  skrifter,  jamte  hwad 
Justitise-cancellers  Ambetet  derwid  bli- 
fivit  pamint.  2d  ed  Stockholm,  Carl 
Stolpe   1768  23p 

NY 

Utlatanda,  uppa  Tustitias  cancellcrens 
underdaniga  hemstallande,  rorande 
skrifoch  trvckfriheten.  Stockholm,  J. 
G.   Lange    1768  8p 

NY 


32 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Comparative  view  of  the  conduct  of  J. 
Wilkes;  as  contrasted  with  the  op- 
posite measures  during  the  last  six 
years.     London,  J.  Williams  1768  27p 

NY 

[Grenville,  George] 

Speech  of  the  right  honourable  gentle- 
man on  the  motion  for  expelling  Mr 
Wilkes,  Friday,  February  3,  1769.  Lon- 
don, J.  Almon  1769  54p 

NY  Y 

— Same.     3d  ed  London  1769  54p 

Priestley,   Joseph,    1733-1804 

View  of  the  principles  and  conduct  of  the 
Protestant  dissenters,  with  respect  to 
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England.     London   1769 

Wilkes,  John,    1727-1797 

English  liberty;  or.  The  British  lion 
routed;  containing  the  sufferings  of 
John  Wilkes,  esq.,  from  the  first  of  his 
persecution  down  to  this  present  time. 
Black  Friars,  T.  Marsh   1769  2v  in   1 

NY 

A  letter  of  the  Right  Honorable  George 
Grenville,  occasioned  by  the  publica- 
tion of  the  speech,  &c.  pam.  London 
1769 

Speech  of  the  Right  Honorable  gentle- 
man on  the  motion  for  expelling  Mr. 
Wilkes,      pam.      London    1769 


1770-1780 
Almon,   John 

Trial  of  John  Almon,  bookseller  for  sel- 
ling Junius's  Letter  to  the  K-.  Lon- 
don 1770 

Backus,  Isaac,   1724-1806 

Seasonable  plea  for  liberty  of  conscience, 
against  some  late  oppressive  proceed- 
ings, particularly  in  the  town  of  Ber- 
wick, in  the  county  of  York.  Boston, 
Phillip    Freeman    1770  48p 

HCL 

Extraordinary    case     of    William    Bingley, 
bookseller,    who    on    the    11th    of   June, 
1768,  was  committed  to  Newgate  upon 
a  writ  of  attachment  of  contempt 
London  1770  '      ' 

NY 

■^TiV'^'^*®  ^''°"   ^^^  North   Briton,   nos.    so,    SL 
75   (May  28,   1768;  June  8,    1768;   Nov   12,   1768) 

[Holbach,    Paul    Henri    Thiry,    baron    d'l 

1723-1789  ■' 

Essai  sur  les  prejuges;  ou,  De  I'influence 
des  opmions  sur  les  moeurs  &  sur  le 
bonheur  des  hommes;  ouvrage  conten- 
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394p 
LC 

Morris,  Robert,   1734-1806 

Letter  to  Sir  Richard  Aston,  one  of  the 
judges  of  His  Majesty's  Court  of  King's 
bench,  containing  a  reply  to  his  scandal- 
ous  abuse,   and   some   thoughts   on   the 


modern    doctrine    of    libels.      London, 
George  Pearch  1770  68p 
NY  Y 

[Murray,  James] 
Sermons    to   asses.      5th    ed    Philadelphia 
1770 
HCL 

Priestley,  Joseph,  1733-1804 

Letters  to  the  author  of  Remarks  on 
several  late  publications  relative  to  the 
Dissenters,  in  a  letter  to  Dr  Priestley. 
London,    T.    Johnson    1770   70p 

NY 

Whisperer,  containing  several  spirited  es- 
says on  civil  liberty;  begun  the  17th  of 
February,  1770  .  .  .  published  in  num- 
bers regularly  every  week,  [by  William 
Moore.]  .  .  .  London,  The  author  1770 
V  1,  no   1-27 

NY  Y 

Another  letter  to  Mr  Almon,  in  matter  of 
libel;  with  a  postcript  upon  contempt 
of  court  and  attachment.  2d  ed  Lon- 
don, J.  Almon  1771   158,xip 

NY  Y 

Dawson,  Benjamin 

Free  thoughts  on  the  subject  of  a  farther 
reformation  of  the  church  of  England. 
1771 

Juryman's  touchstone;  or,  A  full  refuta- 
tion of  Lord  Mansfield's  lawless  opin- 
ion in  crown  libels;  addressed  to  all 
the  jurors  of  England,  by  the  censor 
general.      London,    T.    Evans    1771    95p 

NY 

Woodfall,  H[enry]  S[ampson]  1739-1805 
Summary  of  the  law  of  libel;  in  four  let- 
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addressed  to,  and  printed  in,  The  pub- 
lic Advertiser,  by  H.  S.  Woodfall. 
London,  S.  Bladon  1771  34p 

NY 

[Bollan,  William]   d.  1776 

Essay  on  the  right  of  every  man  in  a 
free  state  to  speak  and  write  freely,  in 
order  to  defend  the  public  rights  and 
promote  the  public  welfare;  and  on  the 
various  great  occasions  for  the  present 
use  of  it.     London,  J.  Almon   1772  49p 

NY 

Candid  thoughts  on  the  application  of 
some  Protestant-Dissenting-ministers  to 
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D 

Case, 

Objections  against  allowing  any  human 
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casioned by  a  late  application  to 
Parliament,)  in  a  letter  to  a  friend. 
Chelmsford,  printed;  London,  Griffin 
1772  25p 


FREE  SPEECH 


33 


Fortegnelse  paa  allc  de  skrifter  som  tryk- 
frihcdcn  har  givet  anlcdning  til;  hvori 
findcs  anf^rt  stederne  hvor  de  sselges, 
hvad  de  koste,  og  hvor  mange  ark  do 
indeholde;  samt  en  kort  erindring  oni 
ct  hvert  skrift  til  efterretning  for  lieb- 
haberne  ...  [1-3  aargang,  Sept.  14, 
1770-Scpt.  1773]  Ki^henhavn,  Kannc- 
worff  1771-[73]   3v 

LC 

Vox  senatus.  The  speeches  at  large  which 
were  made  in  a  great  assembly  .  .  . 
when  J.  C.  Phipps  made  a  motion, 
"For  leave  to  bring  in  a  bill  to  amend 
the  act  of  William  the  Third,  which 
empowers  the  attorney  general  to  file 
informations  ex  officio,"  and  .  .  .  when 
Serjeant  Glynn  made  a  motion,  "That 
a  committee  should  be  appointed  to 
enquire  into  .  .  .  the  proceedings  of 
the  judges  in  Westminster  hall,  partic- 
ularly in  cases  relating  to  the  liberty 
of  the  press,  and  the  constitutional 
power  and  dutv  of  juries  .  .  .  London, 
W.  Woodfall  1771 

NY 

Fownes,  Joseph 

Enquiry  into  the  principles  of  toleration, 
the  degree  in  which  they  are  admitted 
by  our  laws;  and  the  reasonableness 
of  the  late  application  made  by  the  Dis- 
senters to  Parliament  for  an  enlarge- 
ment of  their  religious  liberties.  Lon- 
don,  J.    Buckland    1772    llOp 

D 

— Same.  2d  ed  Shrewsbury,  J.  &  W.  Ed- 
dowes   1773  xxviii,128p 

D  NY 

— Same.  3d  ed  to  which  is  prefixed  an 
introductory  preface,  containing  some 
account  of  the  author,  by  -A.ndrew  Kip- 
pis.  Shrewsbury,  J.  &  W.  Eddowes 
1790  xxxviii,  128p 

D  TS  Y 

Quoted  in  Schroeder,  T.  Constitutional 
free  speech,  pi  13-16.  A  thoro  defence  of 
liberty. 

Holm,  Ad. 

Historia  librorum  Lutheranorum  apud 
Romanenses,  seculo  reformationis. 
[Diss.  acad.  resp.  Gust.  Craelius.] 
Upsaliae,  typis  Erdmannianis  [1772] 
24p 

Hutching, 

Free  thoughts  on  a  late  application  of 
some  Dissenting-ministcrs  to  Parlia- 
ment, in  a  letter  to  the  Rev  .  .  .  where- 
in is  proved,  that  the  prayer  of  their 
petition  originated  with  sentiment;  to 
which  are  added  remarks  on  the  new 
test;    .  .  .    [London]    A.   Bell    1772   53p 

D 

Kippis,   Andrew 

Vindication  of  the  Protestant-Dissenting- 
ministers,  with  regard  to  their  late  ap- 
plication    to     Parliament.        [London] 
Robinson  1772  108p 
D 


— Same.     2d  ed,  cor  and  enl  London,  Rob- 
inson 1772  123p 
D 

Letter  to  the  Protestant-l)i>^scnting-minis- 
ters,  who  lately  solicited  Parliament 
for  further  relief.  London,  Flexnev 
1772  59p 

D 

Mauduit,  Israel 

Case  of  the  dissenting  ministers.  Ad- 
dressed to  the  lords  spiritual  and  tem- 
poral. To  which  is  added,  A  copv  of 
the  bill  proposed  for  their  relief.  4th 
ed  London,  Printed  for  T.  Wilkie  1772 
6Sp 

D  TS 

Radcliff,   [Ebenezer?] 

Sermon  preached  to  a  congregation  of 
Protestant  Dissenters,  at  Crutched- 
friars;  occasioned  by  the  denial  of  re- 
lief, respecting  subscription  to  the 
articles  of  the  church  of  England. 
London,  Domville  1772  32p 
D 

Stennett,  S, 

Free  and  dispassionate  account  of  the 
late  application  of  the  Protestant-dis- 
senting-ministers  to  Parliament;  in  a 
letter  to  a  friend.  London,  J.  Buck- 
land  1772  55p 

D  NY 

Sweden.  Riksdag 

Bilagor  til  Rikscns  Hoglofl.  Standers 
Justitie  deputations  betankande,  af  d. 
31  Martii  1772,  rorande  bokhandlaren 
Holmeen  och  den  med  honom  anstalte 
undersokning  for  utgifwandet  af  skrif- 
ten  kallad:  Uplysning  for  Swenska 
folket.  Stockholm:  Gamla  kongl.  try- 
cheriet   1772   I5p 

NY 

Riksens  Hoglofl.  Standers  Justitie  depu- 
tations betankande  uti  ett  i  kongl.  maj: 
ts  Rad-Kammareafdonde  mal,  rorande 
bokhandlaren  Bengt  Holmeen,  hwilken 
.  .  .  blifwit  ...  til  300  daler  s:mts  boter 
forklarad.  Stockholm,  Gamla  kongl. 
tryckeriet  1772  20p 

NY 

Towgood,  Micaiah,   1700-1792 

Calm  and  plain  answer  to  the  enquiry. 
Why  are  you  a  Dissenter  from  the 
Church  of  England?  containing  some 
rernarks  on  its  doctrine,  spirit,  consti- 
tution .  .  .  offices  and  forms  of  devo- 
tion .  .  .  London,  J.  Buckland  1772  72p 

D   NY 

Williams,    [David]    1738-1816 

Serious  and  earnest  address  to  gentle- 
men of  all  denominations,  who  opposed 
the  late  application  of  the  Protestant- 
dissenting-ministers  to  Parliament,  for 
relief  in  the  matter  of  subscription. 
London,   Robinson    1772  46p 

D 


34 


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Furneaux,  Philip,  1726-1783 

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Gibbons,  Thomas 

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D  TS 

Hutchings,  R. 

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B  TS 

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JCB 

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HCL 

Tucker,  Josiah,   1712-1799 

Letters  to  the  Rev  Dr  Kippis,  occasioned 
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London,  Bladon   1773   13Sp 

D 

Two  letters  addressed  to  the  Right  Rev 
prelates,  who  a  second  time  rejected 
the  Dissenter's  bill.  London,  Printed 
for  J.  Johnson  1773  123p 

D  TS 

Written  by  a  dissenter  favoring  toleration. 
Appendix  has  extract  from  Bishop  Hoadly  on 
reliijious  liberty,  ptog-i6.  Also  letter  by  "A 
New-England  Man."  Opposes  taxation  for 
maintaining:  clergy,  pi  17-23,  republished  from 
unnamed    "public   paper    of   the    3d   June    1772." 


FREE  SPEECH 


35 


Wilton,  Samuel 

Apology  for  the  renewal  of  an  applica- 
tion to  Parliament  by  the  Protestant- 
disscnting-ministers;  addressed  to  the 
thirteen  ministers  who  protested  against 
it.     London,  J.  Buckland  1773  107p 

D 

Address  to  Protestant-dissenters  of  all  de- 
nominations on  the  approaching  elec- 
tion of  members  to  Parliament,  with 
respect  to  the  state  of  public  liberty 
in  general,  and  of  American  affairs  in 
particular.      London,    J.    Johnson    1774 

D 

Address  to  the  public,  relative  to  a  late 
trial  ...  on  a  curious  information,  the 
King,  at  the  suit  of  Wm.  Buckler,  esq., 
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Y 

Attempt  to  state  in  a  short,  plain,  and  im- 
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printed;    London,    Dilly    1774   26p 

D 

Binney,  Barnabas 

Oration  delivered  on  the  late  public  corn- 
mencement,  Rhode  Island  college  in 
Providence,  September  1774;  beginning 
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Knceland  1774 

HCL 

Brief  and  impartial  history  of  the  Puritans, 
by  the  author  of  the  Address.  London, 
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TS 

Collection  of  letters  and  essays  in  favour 
of  public  liberty,  first  published  in  the 
news-papers  in  the  year  1764,  65,  66, 
67,  68,  69,  and  1770  .  .  .  ;  by  an  amicable 
band  of  welhvishers  to  the  religious  and 
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LC 

[Fell,  Joseph] 

Justice  and  utility  of  penal  laws  for  the 
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member  of  the  House  of  commons. 
London,  Dilly  1774  128p 
D 

Human    authority    in    matters    of   faith,    re- 


pugnant   to    Christianity 
T.    Johnson   1774  57p 
D 

Literary   liberty   considered. 


H.    S.   Woodfall. 

1774  32p 


London,   J. 


London, 


letter   to 
Johnson 


NY 

Serious  and  earnest  address  to  Protestant 
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don, J.  Johnson   [1774] 

TS 


[Thomas,  Benjamin] 

Letter  to  the  right  reverend  father  in 
God,  Shute  [Barrington]  Lord  Bishop 
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D 

Toulmin,  Joshua 

Two  letters  on  the  late  applications  to 
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Church  of  England.  London,  Printed 
for  J.  Johnson   1774  85p 

D  TS 

Favors    toleration    for    all    Christians. 

Wilton,   Samuel 

Review  of  some  of  the  articles  of  the 
church  of  England,  to  which  a  sub- 
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land  1774  233p 
D 

Beaumarchais,  [Pierre  Augustin]  Caron  de, 

1732-1799 

Memoires   [a  consulter  pour  P.  A.  C.  de 

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NY  Y 

Calamy,  Edmund 

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Fell,  Joseph 

Fourth  letter  to  the  Rev  Mr  Pickard  on 
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of  the  Dissenters'  new  mode  of  sub- 
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D 

Reasons  for  a  farther  application  to  Par- 
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of  England.  London,  J.  Buckland  1775 
24p 

D 

Hey,  Richard 

Observations   on   the   nature   of  civil  lib- 
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London,  T.  Cadell  1776  70p 
NY  Y 

Price.    Richard,    1723-1791 

Observations   on    the   nature   of   civil   lib- 
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justice    and    policy    of    the    war    with 
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Reprinted    in   Boston,    1776. 

Tucker,  Joseph 

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Desprez  de  Boissy,  Charles,   1730-1787 
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B 

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D 

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D 

Backus,  Isaac,  1724-1806 

Government  and  liberty  described;  and 
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LC  Y 

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Calamy  also  wrote  three  memorials  of  the 
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TS 

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LC 

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D 

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ment, for  the  farther  enlargement  of 
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1779 

D 

Mole,  Thomas 

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D 

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D 

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David   Williams.      London    1779 

Williams,   David 

Nature  and  extent  of  intellectual  liberty, 
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ported by  his  credit  and  eloquence  in 
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17,  1779.     London,  Dodfley 

D 

Johnson,  Lionel 

Gordon  riots.  (Historical  papers,  no.  12) 
London,   Catholic  truth  society  24p 

TS 

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1780-1790 

Suppressed  portion  of  minutes  of  U.S.  Con- 
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Test  Laws  of  Penna.,  by  distraint  of 
goods,  in  lieu  of  fines,  etc.     The  names 


FREE  SPEECH 


37 


of  Isaac  Zane,  James  Trimble,  Charles 
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Printed  by  John  Dunlap 

A  contemporary  MS.   note  on  margin  certifies 
the    suppression. 

Walker,   George,    1734P-1807 

Substance  of  the  speech  of  the  Rev  Mr 
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Milton,  for  the  liberty  of.  unlicensed 
printing  .  .  .  first  published  in  the  year 
1644.  [London?]  Society  for  constitu- 
tional information   1780  12p 

NY 

Whole  proceedings  on  the  King's  commis- 
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and  gaol  delivery  for  the  city  of  Lon- 
don .  .  .  no.  6,  pt  1.  London,  M.  Gur- 
ney    1781    237-76p 

NY 

Contents:  Trial  of  Francis  Henry  dc  la  Motte, 
for    high    treason. 

Newton,  Mrs  Catherine 

Trial  of  the  Hon  I^Irs  Catherine  Newton 
...  at  the  Consistory  court  of  doctor's 
commons,  upon  a  libel  and  allegations, 
charging  her  with  the  crime  of  adultery 
.  .  .  London  1782  112p 
Y 

O'Leary.  Arthur,   1729-1802 

Miscellaneous  tracts,  containing:  A  de- 
fence of  the  divinity  of  Christ,  and  the 
immortality  of  the  soul  .  .  .  ;  Loyalty 
asserted  .  .  .  ;  An  address  to  the  people 
of  Ireland  .  .  .  ;  Remarks  on  a  letter 
...  by  Mr  Wesley;  Rejoinder  to  ^Ir 
Wesley's  reply  .  .  .  Essay  on  tolera- 
tion; added,  An  apology  occasioned  by 
Thundcrstruck's  Remarks  on  the  mode 
of  giving  absolution  to  Popish  crimin- 
als under  sentence  of  death.  3d  ed  enl 
London,  Keating  1782  xx,417p 

B 

Ray,  John  Mead 

Christian  liberty;  or,  The  right  of  pri- 
vate judgment  asserted  in  a  sermon 
.  .  .  before  the  deputies  from  the  sev- 
eral Protestant  dissenting  congrega- 
tions in  the  county  of  Suffolk,  assem- 
bled for  the  purpose  of  deliberating 
upon  mea'^ures  proper  to  be  purstied 
for  obtaining  a  repeal  of  the  Corpora- 
tion and  Test  acts.  Published  at  their 
unanimous  request.  London,  Printed 
for  J.  Buckland  n.d.  26p 

TS 

Inscribed    to    John    Cumberland    who    presided 
and   sigrns   the   resolutions    (P23-6) 

Vryheid  der  drukpers,  onafschcidclyk  verk- 
nogh  aan  de  vryheid  der  rcpublick. 
Amsterdam,  P.  Conradi  1782  59p 

NY 

Priestley,  Joseph,   1733-1804 

An  appeal  to  the  serious  and  candid  pro- 
fessors of  Christianity  on  the  follow- 
ing   subject    ...    An    account    of    the 


trial  of  Mr  Elwell  for  heresy  and  blas- 
phemy at  the  Stafford  assizes.  Lon- 
don,  J.   Johnson    1783   72p 

NY 

As   to   Elwell   trial   see   under   Elwell,   E.,   and 
Schroeder,      T.        Constitutional      free      speech, 

P334-7. 

Spain.  Laws,  statutes,  etc.,  1759-1788 
(Charles  III) 
Real  cedula  de  S.  M.  y  senores  del  Con- 
sejo,  por  la  qual  se  manda  obscrvar  la 
instruccion  inserta  para  el  modo  de 
introducir  en  las  provincias  de  Castilla 
y  Aragon  los  libros  que  se  impriman 
en  Navarra  en  cumplimiento  de  lo  dis- 
puesto  en  la  ley  10.  de  las  liltimas 
cortes  de  aquel  reyno.  Madrid,  Impr, 
dc   Don   Pedro  Alarin    [1783]    [9]p 

LC 

Shipley,  William  Davies,  1745-1826 
At  the  assizes  at  Shrewsbury,  on  Friday, 
August  the  sixth,  1784,  in  the  cause  of 
the  king  on  the  prosecution  of  William 
Jones  against  Rev  W^  D.  Shipley,  dean 
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H.    Goldney    17&4    112p 

NY 

Whole  of  the  proceedings  at  the  assizes 
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Spain.  Laws,  statutes,  etc.,  1759-1788 
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Real  cedula  de  S.  M.  y  senores  del  Con- 
sejo,  por  la  qual  se  manda  observar  le 
ley  viente  y  tres,  titulo  sieto,  libro 
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a  que  no  se  vendan  libros  que  vengan 
de  fuera  del  reyno  en  qualquier  idioma, 
y  de  qualquier  materia  que  scan,  sin 
que  primero  se  presente  un  exemplar 
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LC 

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Discussions  of  the  law  of  libels  as  at 
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NY 

Blanchard,  William 

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Dawes,  M[atthew] 

Deformity  of  the  doctrine  of  libels  and 
informations  ex  officio,  with  a  view  of 
the  case  of  the  Dean  of  Saint  Asaph 
and  an  inquiry  into  the  rights  of  jury- 
men; in  a  letter  to  the  Honourable 
Thomas  Erskine.  London,  J.  Stock- 
dale   1785  40p 

NY  Y 


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— Same.     London,  J.  Johnson   1790 

Hunter,  W. 

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D 

Paine,  Thomas 
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"The  importance  and  extent  of  free  inquiry." 
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B  D  NY  TS  Y 

Good    defence    of    toleration.       Includes    crit- 
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Arguments  against  a  repeal  of  the  Cor- 
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Hawkins,  John 

Expostulatory  address  to  the  Reverend 
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for  those  who  conscientiously  sub- 
scribe to  the  articles  of  the  Church  of 
England;  and,  in  particular,  to  the  doc- 
trines of  the  Trinity  and  divinity  of 
Christ.  Worcester,  J.  Tymbs;  also  Mr 
Smart;  London,  S.  Haynes  1788  56p 
TS 

Partly  devoted  to  interpreting  the  tests  and 
articles  of  the  church  to  show  that  all  "sober- 
minded  Christians"  can  find  an  interpretation 
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Marolles,  Louis  de 

History  of  the  sufferings  of  Lewis  de 
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Robinson,   R. 

Discourse  on  sacramental  tests.  De- 
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D  TS 

Inscribed  to  Maj.   Gen'r'l  Adcane,   M.   P.  and 
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Rights  of  Dissenters  from  the  established 
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1789  66p 

D 

Bien  public,  a  I'avantage  du  roi  ct  a  celui 
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D 

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NY 

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Memoirs   of    John    Almon,   bookseller,    of 

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LC 
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D 

Bristov^,  W. 

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Test  laws  defended,  sermon  preached  at 
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country  freeholder.  London,  Lowndes 
1790  69p 

D 

Debate  in  the  House  of  commons  on  Tues- 
day the  2d  March,  1790,  on  the  motion 
of  Mr  Fox,  for  a  repeal  of  the  Cor- 
poration and  Test  acts;  in  which  the 
arguments  of  the  different  speakers  are 
given  with  correctness  and  impartiality. 
London,  Walter  1790  58p 

B   D 

De  Coetlogon, 

Test  of  truth,  piety,  and  religion;  sermon 
delivered  on  the  day  of  sacramental 
qualification  for  the  chief  magistracy  of 
the  city  of  London;  before  the  Lord 
mayor,  the  aldermen,  and  sheriffs. 
London,  Rivingtons  1790  25p 

Dialogue  between  Bishop  Hoadley  and 
Bishop  Sherlock,  on  the  Corporation 
and  Test  acts.  London,  Davis  1790 
46p 

D 

[Disney,  John] 

Arranged  catalogue  of  the  several  public- 
ations which  have  appeared,  relating  to 
the  enlargement  of  the  toleration  of 
Protestant-dissenting-ministers,  and  the 
repeal  of  the  Corporation  and  Test 
acts;  with  reference  to  the  agitation 
of  those  questions  in  Parliament  from 
1772  to  1790.  London,  J.  Johnson  1790 
34,  31p 
HCL 

All   entries  in   the  above   catalog  are   included 
in    this    bibliography. 

Dispute  adjusted  about  the  proper  time  of 
applying  for  a  repeal  of  the  Corporation 
and  Test  acts:  by  shewing,  that  no  time 
is  proper.  Oxford,  Prince;  London, 
Rivingtons  1790  16p 

D  ^        . 

First   published   in    the   year    1732;    and    again 
in    1736. 

Drummond, 

Sermon  in  the  Parish  church_  of  Don- 
caster,  at  the  primarv  visitation  of  the 
Archdeacon  of  York,  Aug.  13,  1787;  to 
which  are  added,  a  few  plain  arguments 
against  the  repeal  of  the  Corporation 
and  Test  acts.  London,  Rivingtons 
1790   30p 

D 

[Eaton,  Daniel  Isaac]   d.  1814 

Prosecutions  for  political  opinions.  (Po- 
litical lectures,  etc.)  n.t.,  n.p.  [London 
1790?]    29p 

NY 

Eaton    was    twice    prosecuted.     Schrocder,    T. 
Constitutional   free   speech,    P34S-47- 

Ellys,  Anthony 

Plea  for  the  sacramental  test,  as  a  just 
security  for  the  church  established,  and 
very  conducive  to  the  welfare  of  the 
state;  humbly  submitted  to  the  consid- 
eration  of  both   houses   of   Parliament, 


42 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Ellys,  Anthony — Continued 

and  to  all  the  well-wishers  of  our  con- 
stitution. 3d  ed  London,  Rivingtons 
1790  53p 

D 

Episcopal  opinions  on  the  Test  and  Cor- 
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of  Peers  in  December  1718;  by  arch- 
bishops Wake  and  Dawes;  bishops 
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Robinson,  Atterburv,  Kennet  and  Gast- 
rell  .  .  .   London,   Pridden    1790  31p 

D 

Essay  on  the  origin,  character,  and  views 
of  the  Protestant-dissenters.  Oxford, 
Prince;    London,    Rivingtons    1790   29p 

D 

Extracts  from  books  and  other  small  pieces: 
in  favor  of  religious  liberty,  and  the 
rights  of  Dissenters.  Birmingham 
printed;  London,  J.  Johnson  1790  22  & 
32p 

D 

Facts,  submitted  to  the  consideration  of  the 
friends  to  civil  and  religious  liberty, 
but  more  particularly  addressed  to  the 
Protestant-dissenters  of  England  and 
Wales;  containing  bishop  Horsley's 
extraordinary  letter  to  the  clergy  of  his 
diocese;  and  the  substance  of  Mr  Fox's 
speech  on  the  repeal  of  the  Test  laws. 
London,  J.  Johnson  1790  44p 

D 

Fox,  Charles  James 

Speech  ...  in  the  House  of  commons, 
on  Tuesday,  March  2,  1790,  upon  his 
motion  for  the  repeal  of  the  Corpora- 
tion and  Test  acts.  London,  Ridge- 
way  1790  44p 

D 

Two  speeches  delivered  in  the  House  of 
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March  1790,  ...  in  support  of  his  mo- 
tion for  a  repeal  of  the  Corporation  and 
Test   acts.     London,   Debrett    1790   86p 

D 

Full  and  fair  discussion  of  the  pretensions 
of  the  Dissenters  to  the  repeal  of  the 
sacramental  test.  Oxford,  Prince; 
London,   Rivingtons   1790  26p 

D 

First    published    in    1733. 

Hastings,   Warren 

Proceedings  on  the  trial  of  an  informa- 
tion against  John  Stockdale  for  libel 
on  the  House  of  commons  [i.e.  in  con- 
nection with  Logan's  Review  of  the 
charges  against  Warren  Hastings]. 
1790 
Hint  of  advice  addressed  to  the  Protestant- 
dissenters,  on  a  late  decision  in  the 
House  of  commons  on  a  motion  for 
a  repeal  of  the  Test  and  Corporation 
acts.     London,  J.  Johnson   1790  22p 

History  of  the  Test  act:  in  which  the  mis- 
takes in  some  late  writings  against  it 
are  rectified,  and  the  importance   of  it 


to  the  church  explained.  London  1732 
31p;  Oxford  reprinted,  Fletcher;  Lon- 
don, Rivingtons  1790 

D 

Hobson, 

Series  of  remarks  upon  a  sermon  preached 
at  St  Philip's  church  ...  by  George 
Croft,  D.D.  .  .  .  P)irmingham  printed; 
London,  J.  Johnson   1790  68p 

D 

Horsley,   S. 

Review  of  the  case  of  the  Protestant-dis- 
senters; with  reference  to  the  Corpora- 
tion and  Test  acts.  London,  Printed 
for  J.   Robson   1790  vii-xviii,  63p 

NY 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum.  Indice  ul- 
timo de  los  libros  prohibidos  y  mandalos 
expurgar;  para  todos  los  reynos  y 
senorios  del  catolico  rey  de  las 
Espanas,  el  senor  Don  Carlos  IV:  con- 
tiene  en  resumen  todos  los  libros  pues- 
tos  en  el  Indice  expurgatoris  del  ano 
1747  y  en  los  edictos  posteriores,  asta 
fin  de  die.    de  1789.     1790 

Keate.  W. 

Address  of  William  Bull,  gent,  to  Wil- 
liam Poole,  esq.  steward  of  the  manor 
of  Bishops'-Whitelands,  in  the  south 
part  of  Great  Britain.  Bath.  Crutwell; 
London,  Dilly  1790  41p 

D 

Free  examination  of  Dr  Price's  and  Dr 
Priestley's  sermons  .  .  .  London,  Dods- 
ley   1790  64p 

D 

Keralio,   Louis   Felix   Guinement   de,    1731- 

1793 
De  la  liberte  d'enoncer,  d'ecrire   et  d'im- 

primer  la   pensee.      [Paris,   Impr.   de   L. 

Potier  de  Lille  1790]   58p 
LC 

Letter  addressed  to  the  delegates  from  the 
several  congregations  of  Protestant-dis- 
senters, who  met  at  Devizes,  on  Sept. 
14.  1789.  Salisbury,  printed;  London, 
Wilkie   1790  27p 

D 

Letter  to  the  author  of  observations  on  the 
conduct  of  the  Protestant-dissenters. 
Bury,   printed   1790  24p 

D 

Letter  and  queries  to  Dr  Priestley,  relative 
to  the  principles  of  the  Corporation  and 
Test  acts;  occasioned  by  his  sermon, 
preached  at  Birmingham,  on  the  5th  of 
Nov.   1789.     London,   Bew   1790  36p 

D 

Letter  to  a  friend,  on  the  Test  act,  by  a 
Christian  believer,  philanthropist,  and 
North  Briton.  London,  Stockdale  1790 
37p 

D 

Letter  to  a  nobleman,  containing  consider- 
ations on  the  laws  relating  to  Dis- 
senters and  on  the  intended  application 


FREE  SPEECH 


43 


to    Parliament    for    the    repeal    of    the 
Corporation   and   Test   acts;    by   a   lay- 
man.    London,   Cadell   1790   192p 
D 

Letter  to  the  Parliament  of  Great  Britain, 
on  the  intended  application  of  the 
Protestant-dissenters,  for  obtaining  a 
repeal  of  the  Corporation  and  Test 
acts;  by  a  member  of  the  university  of 
Cambridge  .  .  .  London,  Rivingtons 
1790  22p 

D 

Letter  to  the  public  meeting  of  the  Friends 
to  the  repeal  of  the  Test  and  Corpora- 
tion acts,  at  the  London  tavern,  on 
February  the  13th,  1790,  from  a  lay 
Dissenter.     London  1790  15p 

D  TS 

Good  statement  favoring  the  repeal  of  religious 
test   laws. 

Letter  to  the  R.  R.  the  archbishops  and 
bishops  of  England;  pointing  out  the 
only  sure  means  of  preserving  the 
church  from  the  dangers  that  now 
threaten  her  .  .  .  London,  J.  Johnson 
1790  25p 

D 

Letters  on  the  subject  of  the  proper  liber- 
ty of  the  press;  by  an  Englishman; 
first  published  in  the  paper  of  The 
World.  London,  P.  Byrne,  J.  Moore, 
etc.     1790  58p 

NY 

Letters  to  the  people  of  England,  against 
the  repeal  of  the  Test  and  Corporation 
acts;  bv  a  graduate  of  Oxford.  Lon- 
don, Bell  1790  47p 

D 

Lofft,  Cappell,   1751-1824 

History  of  the  Corporation  and  Test  acts; 
with  an  investigation  of  their  impor- 
tance to  the  establishment  in  church 
and  state.  Bury,  printed;  London. 
Robinsons  1790  30p 

D 

Vindication  of  the  short  history  of  the 
Corporation  and  Test  acts.  London, 
J.    Tohnson    1790 

D 

Look  to  the  last  century;  or.  The  Dis- 
senters weighed  in  their  own  scales. 
London,  White  &  son   1790   143p 

D 

Madan,  Spencer 

Letter  to  Dr  Priestley  in  consequence 
of  his  "Familiar  letters."  etc.  Birm- 
ingham printed;  [London.  J.  Johnson] 
1790  48p 

D 

Principal  claims  of  the  Dissenters  con- 
sidered, sermon  preached  at  St  Pliilip's 
church  in  Birmingham,  on  Sunday  the 
14th  of  February  1790.  Birmingham 
printed;   [London,  Faulder]    1790  36p 


Martin,  John 
Speech  on  the  repeal  of  such  parts  of 
the  Test  and  Corporation  acts  as  affect 
conscientious  Dissenters:  intended  to 
have  been  delivered  before  the  general 
body  of  Dissenting-ministers  at  the  li- 
brary in  Red-cross  street,  Dec.  22,  1789. 
London,   Stockdale   1790  30p 

D 

Milton,  John,   1608-1674 

Treatise  of  civil  power  in  ecclesiastical 
causes:  shewing  that  it  is  not  lawful 
for  any  power  on  earth  to  compel  in 
matters  of  religion.  First  printed 
anno  MDCLIX.  London,  Reprinted 
for  J.  Johnson   1790  vii,47p 

B   D   NYSE 

— Same.  (In  his:  Prose  works.  2:520-48 
1848) 

HCL 

— Same.     London,   E.  Wilson   1839  36p 

NY 

North,   Frederick,    1732-1792 

Speeches  ...  on  a  motion  for  a  repeal 
of  the  Corporation  and  Test  acts,  as 
delivered  in  the  House  of  commons, 
March  28,  1787.  and  May  8,  1789.  Lon- 
don, Walter  1790  30p 

D 

Observations  occasioned  by  the  late  de- 
cision in  Parliament,  in  favour  of  the 
Test  laws:  being  a  sermon  preached 
in  a  country  chapel  on  the  7th  of  March 
1790.  Manchester,  printed;  London,  J. 
Johnson  1790  18p 

D 

Observations  on  the  case  the  Protestant 
dissenters  with  reference  to  the  Cor- 
poration and  Test  acts.  Oxford, 
printed;  London,  Rivington  1790  19p 

D 

Observations  on  the  conduct  of  the  Prot- 
estant-dissenters. London,  Pridden 
1790  27,  17p 

D 

Observations  on  the  origin  and  effects  of 
the  Test  act;  with  some  hints  for  the 
consideration  of  the  clergy;  by  a  Dis- 
senter.     London,   J.   Johnson    1790   41p 

D 

Observations  suggested  by  the  perusal  of 
Mr  Lofft's  History  of  the  Corporation 
and  Test  acts;  by  a  clergyman  of  the 
establishment.  Burv,  printed;  London, 
Robinson's    1790   30p 

D 

Owen. 

Dissenters'  present  claims  considered; 
sermon  preached  in  the  Parish  church 
of  Warrington,  on  the  30th  of  January, 
1790.  Warrington  printed;  London, 
Lowndes   1790  33p 

D 

Palmer,     Samuel,      Independent     minister, 
1741-1813 
Vindication    of    the    modern     Dissenters 
against  the  aspersions  of  William  Haw- 
kins [on  certain  notes  of  S.  Palmer  on 


44 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Palmer,    Samuel  ^Continued 

Dr  Johnson's  Life  of  Dr  Watts  .  .  . 
and  the  .  .  .  author  of  A  review  of  the 
case  of  the  Protestant  dissenters  [Sam- 
uel Horsley]  with  reference  to  the  Cor- 
poration and  Test  acts.  London,  J. 
Johnson   1790  38p 

B  Y 

Pearce,  S. 

Sermon,  preached  before  the  congregation 
of  Protestant-dissenters,  meeting  in 
Cannon-street,  Birmingham,  Feb.  21, 
1790  .  .  .  Birmingham,  printed;  London, 
J.  Johnson  1790  34p 

D 

Philo-Theodosius ;  or,  A  new  edition  of 
Theodosius,  with  a  new  character  of 
Mr  Burke;  to  which  are  added,  for  the 
convenience  of  gentlemen,  disposed  by 
duty  or  inclination,  to  become  perfect 
masters  of  the  subject,  a  series  of  prop- 
ositions on  the  nature  of  establishments, 
civil  and  religious;  containing  the  sum 
and  substance  of  all  that  has  ever  been 
advanced  on  the  subject  of  the  Test 
and  Corporation  acts  .  .  .  London, 
Bourne  1790  31p 

D 

Priestley,  Joseph,  1733-1804 

Familiar  letters,  addressed  to  the  inhab- 
itants of  the  town  of  Birmingham,  in 
refutation  of  several  charges,  advanced 
against  the  Dissenters,  by  the  Reverend 
Mr  Madan,  rector  of  St  Philip's,  in 
his  sermon,  entitled.  The  principal 
claims  of  the  Dissenters  considered,  etc. 
Birmingham  printed;  London,  J.  John- 
son   1790   131p 

D 

Public  documents  declaratory  of  the  prin- 
ciples of  the  Protestant-dissenters,  and 
proving  that  the  repeal  of  the  Corpor- 
ation and  Test  acts  was  earnestly  de- 
sired by  King  William  III  and  King 
George  L  and  also  by  many  respect- 
able members  of  the  church  of  England 
.  .  .  Birmingham,  printed;  London, 
Johnson  1790  viii,24p 

D 

Ray,  J.  Mead 

Sermon  preached  at  Stow-markct,  on 
Tuesday,  Dec.  1,  1789,  before  the  dep- 
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senting congregations  in  the  county  of 
Suffolk,  assembled  for  the  purpose  of 
deliberating  upon  measures  proper  to 
be  pursued  for  obtaining  a  repeal  of 
the  Corporation  and  Test  laws.  ...  2d 
ed  London,  J.  Buckland  1790  26p 
D 

Reasons  for  seeking  a  repeal  of  the  Cor- 
poration and  Test  acts,  submitted  to 
the  consideration  of  the  candid  and  im- 
partial; by  a  Dissenter.  London,  Buck- 
land  1790  42p 

D 

Review  of  the  case  of  the  Protestant-dis- 
senters, with  reference  to  the  Corpora- 


tion and  Test  acts;  in  which  the  rea- 
sons alleged  by  the  non-conformists  for 
the  repeal  of  those  laws,  are  examined 
under  three  heads,  to  which  they  are 
reducible  of  grounds  of  calm,  religious 
motives,  and  political  considerations, 
and  shewn  to  fail  in  each  branch.  Lon- 
don, Robson  1790  63p 
D 

Scourge  for  the  Dissenters;  or,  Non-con- 
formity unmasked:  occasioned  by  the 
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sessions  of  Parliament,  for  the  repeal 
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sermon  preached  at  the  Old  Jewry 
meeting-house,  on  the  4th  of  Novem- 
ber, 1789  .  .  .  London,  Parsons  1790 
55p 

D 

Serious  address  to  the  Rev  Mr  Madan,  con- 
taining some  observations  on  his  ser- 
mon preached  at  St  Philip's  church,  etc. 
by  a  layman.  Birmingham  printed; 
London,  Johnson   1790  16p 

D 

Short  examination  of  some  of  the  principal 
reasons  for  the  repeal  of  the  Test  and 
Corporation  acts,  as  contained  in  the 
resolutions  for  a  meeting  of  delegates 
of  the  several  congregations  of  Prot- 
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of  the  countj^  of  Somerset;  by  a  clergy- 
man of  the  church  of  England.  Lon- 
don, Rivingtons  1790  23p 

D 

Short  reply  to  the  speech  intended  to  be 
spoken  by  the  Right  Hon  C.  J.  Fox,  in 
favour  of  the  repeal  of  the  Test  and 
Corporation  acts.  London,  Stockdale 
1790   34p 

D 

Some  strictures  on  a  late  publication,  en- 
titled. Reasons  for  seeking  a  repeal, 
etc.  Bv  a  churchman.  London,  Riv- 
ingtons 1790  32p 

D 

Spirit  of  the  constitution  and  that  of  the 
church  of  England,  compared;  to  which 
are  added,  by  another  hand,  Remarks 
on  two  letters  addressed  to  the  dele- 
gates, etc.  London,  J.  Johnson  1790 
42p 

D 

Stockdale,  John,  1749P-1814 

Whole  proceedings  on  the  trial  of  an  in- 
formation exhibited  ex  officio,  by  the 
king's  attorney  general,  against  John 
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support  of  the  rights  of  juries  [by  T. 
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M'Allister  1790  xi,124p 

NY 


FREE  SPEECH 


45 


Swift,   Jonathan,    1667-1745 

Tracts  on  the  repeal  of  the  Test  act, 
written  and  first  published  in  Ireland, 
in  the  years  1731-2.  1.  The  Presby- 
terian's plea  of  merit,  in  order  to  take 
off  the  Test,  impartially  examined.  2. 
The  advantages  proposed,  by  repealing 
the  sacramental  test  impartially  con- 
sidered. 3.  Queries  relating  to  the  sac- 
ramental test.  London,  Walter  1790 
50p 

D 

Test  Acts;  intended  as  a  supplement  to  Dr 
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B 

Test  against  test;  or,  A  view  of  the  mea- 
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candidate  for  a  seat  in  the  House  of 
commons,  the  next  general  election. 
London,    Rider   1790   Single   sheet 

D 

Theodosius;  or,  A  solemn  admonition  to 
Protestant-dissenters,  on  the  proposed 
repeal  of  the  Test  and  Corporation  acts. 
.  .  .    London,  J.    Buckland    1790  68p 

D 

Toleration  and  charity  peculiar  to  the 
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B.  Bishop  of ,  in  Languedoc,  to  his 

friend,  a  bishop  in  Normandy;  trans- 
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D 

Tonnere,  Clermont 

Speech  spoken  .  .  .  Christmas-eve  last, 
on  the  subject  of  admitting  non-Cath- 
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privileges  of  citizens,  according  to  the 
Declaration  of  rights.  London,  [Stuart] 
1790  16p 
D 

Wakefield.    GUbert,    1756-1801 

Address  to  the  inhabitants  of  the  town 
of  Nottingham,  occasioned  bj'  a  letter 
lately  sent  to  the  mayor,  and  some 
other  members  of  the  corporation  of 
that  time;  with  an  appendix  on  the  sub- 
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son   1790  31p 

D 

Cursory  reflections,  occasioned  by  the 
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claims  of  the  Dissenters,  and  the  repeal 
of  the  Corporation  and  Test  acts. 
Birmingham,  printed;  London,  Deigh- 
ton   1790 


Areopagitica:  an  essay  on  the  liberty  of 
tlie  press;  dedicated  to  the  Rt  Hon 
Charles  James  Fox,  the  friend  of  truth 
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NY 


Biddle,  John,  1615-1662 

Toulmin,  Joshua.  A  review  of  the  life, 
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Not  published  1791 

"Father  of  Unitarianism"  was  a  much  perse- 
cuted man.  See:  .Schroeder,  T.  Constitutional 
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Colebrook,  Sir  George 

Letter  containing  considerations  on  the 
laws  relative  to  dissenters,  etc.,  1790 — 
Collection  of  testimonies  in  favour  of 
religious  liberty,  in  the  case  of  Dissen- 
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1790,  and  another.     1791? 

[Eliot,   Francis   Percival] 

Essay  on  bigotry;  religious  innovation 
and  infidelity,  as  respectively  supported 
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min, in  a  letter  to  John  ^^litford,  esq.; 
by  Falkland.  London,  Printed  for  C. 
Stalher   1791 

Hall,  Robert,  1764-1831 

Christianity  consistent  with  a  love  of 
freedom:  being  an  answer  to  a  sermon, 
lately  published  by  the  Rev  John  Clay- 
ton. London,  Printed  for  J.  Johnson 
1791  80p 

TS  ... 

Deals  with  the  duty  of  private  Christians  and 
ministers  in  relation  to  civil  government  and 
with    the    Test    Act. 

Leland,  John,  1754-1841 

Rights  of  conscience  inalienable  and 
therefore  religious  opinions  not  cogniz- 
able by  law;  or  the  high-flying  church- 
man stript  of  his  legal  robe,  appears  a 
yaho.  New  London,  Conn.,  Printed  by 
T.  Green  &  son   1791  29p 

Priestley,  Joseph,  1733-1804 

Letters  to  the  Right  Honourable  Edmund 
Burke,  occasioned  by  his  reflections  on 
the  revolution  in  France,  etc.  3d  ed 
cor  Birmingham,  Printed  by  T.  Pearson 
and  sold  by  J.  Johnson  1791   155p 

TS 

On  civil  establishment  being  essential  to 
Christianity,  P79-85;  Uses  of  civil  establishment 
of  religion,  p86-o6;  Of  an  elective  clergy,  po7- 
105 ;  Of  the  dangers  of  the  church  and  of  the 
Test  laws,  pi  23-43:  Of  the  enlargement  of 
liberty,  civil  and  religious,  opened  by  the  revo- 
lution  in    France,   pi43-5S- 

Remonstrance  with  the  Rev  Mr  Clayton,  on 
his  sermon  on  the  Duty  of  Christians 
to  civil  magistrates;  occasioned  by  the 
riots  at  Birmingham;  and  on  his  pre- 
fixed address  to  the  public,  intended  to 
remove  the  reproach  lately  fallen  on 
Protestant  dissenters.  London,  Printed 
for  J.  Johnson  1791  78p 

TS 

The  argument  for  freedom  is  chiefly  Biblical 
and   historical. 

Roberts.  William 

Whole  proceedings  on  the  trial  of  an  ac- 
tion brought  by  Thomas  Walker,  mer- 
chant, against  William  Roberts,  bar- 
rister at  law.  for  a  libel  .  .  .  Manchester, 
C.  Wheeler  1791  208p 

NY 


46 


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Smith,  Samuel  Stanhope,  1750-1819 

Sermon  on  slander,  delivered  at  the 
Church  in  Brattle-Street,  October  24, 
1790.  Boston,  Printed  by  Samuel  Hall 
1791  24p 

B 

Walker,  Thomas 

Whole  proceedings  on  the  trial  of  an  ac- 
tion brought  by  T.  Walker  against  W. 
Roberts,  for  a  libel  .  .  .  tried  ...  at 
Lancaster,  March  28,  1791  .  .  .  Man- 
chester,  C.  Wheeler   1791   208p 

NY 

Bowles,  John 

Letter  to  the  Right  Hon  Charles  James 
Fox,  occasioned  by  his  motion  .  .  .  res- 
pecting libels^.  .  .  2d  ed  London,  Printed 
for  Whieldon  and  Butterworth  1792  34p 

Y 

Second  letter  to  the  Right  Honourable 
Charles  James  Fox,  upon  the  matter  of 
libel  .  .  .  London,  Printed  for  Whieldon 
and    Butterworth    1792  vi,58p 

Y 

Hobhouse,  Sir  Benjamin 

Treatise  on  heresy,  as  cognizable  by  the 
spiritual  courts  and  an  examination  of 
the  statutes  of  William  III  for  support- 
ing blasphemy  and  profaneness.  n.p. 
1792 

W 

Paine,   Thomas,    1737-1809 

Letter  addressed  to  the  addressers,  on  the 
late  proclamation  [for  suppressing  sedi- 
tious publications,  etc.]  London,  Print- 
ed for  J.   Davidson   1792  40p 

B 

— Same.      London,    Printed    for    H.    D.    Sy- 
monds  1792?  40p? 

B 

—Same.     Philadelphia,  Printed  for  H.  &  P. 
Rice   1793  43p 

B 

—Same.     New  York,  T.  Greenleaf  1793  38p 

NY 

—Same.     (In  his:  Works.  v2)  London  1792 
78p 


Trial  of  Thomas  Paine,  for  a  libel,  con- 
tained in  the  second  part  of  the  Rights 
of  man,  before  Lord  Kenyon,  and  a 
special  jury,  at  Guildhall,  December  18; 
with  the  speeches  of  the  attorney  gen- 
eral and  Mr  Erskine,  at  large.  London, 
Printed  for  C.  &  G.  Kearsley  1792  45p 

LC   NY 

— Same;  carefully  revised  and  corrected. 
London   [1792]  45p 

Two  letters  to  Lord  Onslow,  lord  lieuten- 
ant of  the  county  of  Surry;  and  one 
to  Mr  Henry  Dundas,  secretary  of  state, 
on  the  subject  of  the  late  excellent 
proclamation  for  suppressing  seditious 
publications.  3d  ed  London,  Printed 
for  J.  Ridgway  1792  36p 
B  Y 


Priestley,   Joseph,    1733-1804 

Appeal  to  the  public  on  the  subject  of  the 
riots  in  Birmingham.  London,  J.  John- 
son   1792  xxvii,210p 

NY 

—Same.     2d  ed   Birmingham   1792 

Thoughts  on  the  necessity  and  means  of  a 
reform  in  the  Church  of  England.  By 
a  friend  to  religion  and  his  country. 
London,  Printed  for  J.  Johnson,  C.  Dilly 
&  T.    Knott    1792   64p 

TS 

Argues   for   a  separation   of  church   and  state. 

Barnard,   Thomas,    1728-1806 

Observations  on  the  proceeding  of  the 
Friends  of  liberty  of  the  press,  etc., 
December  22,  1792;  and  an  answer  to 
Mr  Erskine's  speech  of  January  19, 
1793.     London,  J.   Evans   1793  39p 

NY 

Bowles,  John 

Short  answer  to  the  declaration  of  the 
persons  calling  themselves  the  Friends 
of  the  liberty  of  the  press.  London, 
J.    Downes    1793  24p 

NY 

Eaton,   Daniel   Isaac,  d.    1814 

Proceedings  on  the  trial  of  D.  I.  Eaton, 
upon  an  indictment  for  selling  a  sup- 
posed libel,  "The  second  part  of  the 
rights  of  man,  combining  principle  and 
practice,"  by  Thomas  Paine  .  .  .  June, 
1793.  2d  ed  London,  D.  I.  Eaton  [1793] 
50p 

NY 

Abstracted    in:     Schroeder,    T.      Constitutional 
free    speech,    p34S-47- 

Erskine,  Thomas  Erskine,  1st  baron,  1750- 
1823 
Celebrated  speech  of  the  Hon.  T.  Erskine. 
in  support  of  the  liberty  of  the  press; 
delivered  .  .  .  December  18,  1792;  to 
which  is  prefixed  a  preface  by  a  Scotch 
member  of  Parliament.  Edinburgh,  J. 
Buel  1793  68p 

NY 

Declaration  of  the  Friends  to  the  liberty 
of  the  press,  assembled  at  the  Crown 
and  Anchor  tavern,  Saturdav,  January 
19,  1793.  2d  ed  London,  J.  Ridgway 
1793' 21p 
B   NY   Y 

Mr  Erskine's  speech,  spoken  at  the  meet- 
ing of  the  Friends  to  the  freedom  of 
the  press,  January  19,  1793.  n.t.p. 
[London]    J.    Ridgway    [1793] 

NY 

Frend,  William 

Account  of  the  proceedings  in  the  uni- 
versity against  William  Frend,  .  .  .  for 
publishing  a  pamphlet,  intitled  Peace 
and  union,  containing  proceedings  in 
Jesus    college,    the    trial    in    the    vice- 


FREE  SPEECH 


47 


TS 


chancellcr's  court  and  in  the  court  of 
delegates.  Cambridge,  B.  Flower  1793 
Ixiii,   262p 


Friends  to  the  liberty  of  the  press.  London 

Proceedings  on  Dec.  22,  1792,  and  Jan.  19, 
and   March   9,    1793.     London    1793   22p 

B   NY 

Resolutions  of  the  first  meeting  of  the 
Friends  to  the  liberty  of  the  press, 
December  19th,  1792;  also  the  declara- 
tion of  the  second  meeting,  January 
22nd,  1793,  written  by  the  Hon  Thomas 
Erskine;  to  which  is  added  a  letter  to 
Mr  Reeves,  chairman  of  the  Associa- 
tion for  preserving  liberty  and  prop- 
erty; by  Thomas  Law  .  .  .  London, 
Printed   for  J.   Ridgway   1793  27p 

B   LC  NY  TS  Y 

Hall,  Robert,  of  Bristol,  1764-1831 

An  apology  for  the  freedom  of  the  press, 
and  for  general  liberty:  to  which  are 
prefixed  remarks  on  Bishop  Horsley's 
sermon,  preached  on  the  thirtieth  of 
January  last.  London,  G.  G.  J.  &  J. 
Robinson    1793  xix,   103p 

TS 

— Same.     2d  ed  London,  G.  G.  J.  &  J.  Rob- 
inson  1793  xix,119p 

NY 

— Same.    6th  ed,  with  corrections.     London, 
Hamilton    1821    v,xiv,iv,108p 

B 

— Same.     (In  his:   Entire  works.     3:1-202) 

HCL 

Deals    specially    with    religion. 

Hegewisch,  D[ietrich]  H[emiann]  1746-1812 
D.  H.  Hegewisch  an  Deutschlands 
patrioten;  anzeige  von  der  art,  wie  ein 
censor  in  Leipzig  ein  ihm  vorgelegtes 
manuscript  hat  bchandeln  wollen.  Kiel, 
Bey  C.  E.  Bohn  1793  72p 

LC 

[Karl   Theodor,   archbishop   and   elector  of 

Mainz]    1744-1817 
Von    dem     einflusse    der    wissenschaften 

und    schonen    kiinste    in   beziehung   auf 

offentliche  ruhe.    Erfurt,   G.   A.    Keyser 

1793  74p 
LC 

Law,  Thomas 

Letter  to  Mr  Reeves,  chairman  of  the 
.Association  for  preserving  liberty  and 
property.  (In:  Erskine,  Thomas 
Erskine.  baron.  Resolutions  of  the 
first  meeting  of  the  Friends  to  the  lib- 
erty of  the  press  .  .  .  London  1793 
p  21-7) 
NY  TS 

Muir,  Thomas,  1765-1798 

Trial  of  Thomas  Muir,  younger,  of  Hunt- 
tershill,  before  the  High  court  of  justi- 
ciary, at  Edinburgh,  on  the  30th  and 
31st  days  of  August,  1793.  for  sedition. 
London,   J.   Ridgway    [1793?]    128p 

NY 


Paine,    Thomas,    1737-1809 

Whole  proceedings  on  the  trial  of  an 
information  exhibited  ex  officio  by  the 
king's  attorney  general  against  Thomas 
Paine  for  a  libel  upon  the  revolution 
and  settlement  of  the  crown  and  regal 
government  as  by  law  established;  and 
also  upon  the  bill  of  rights,  the  legis- 
lature, government,  laws  and  parlia- 
ment of  this  kingdom,  and  upon  the 
king.  Tried  by  a  special  jury  in  the 
Court  of  King's  bench,  Guildhall,  on 
Tuesday,  the  18th  of  December,  1792, 
before  the  Right  Honourable  Lord  Ken- 
yon.  London,  Sold  by  Martha  Gurney 
1793    196p 

LC  NY 

— Same.  2d  ed  London,  Sold  bv  Martha 
Gurney    1793    196p 

LC    NY 

Palmer,  Thomas  Fyshe,   1747-1802 

Trial  of  the  Rev  Thomas  Fyshe  Palmer, 
before  the  Circuit  court  of  justiciary, 
held  at  Perth,  on  the  12th  and  13th 
September,  1793,  on  an  indictment  for 
seditious  practices  .  .  .  with  an  appen- 
dix. Edinburgh,  W.  Skirving  [1793?] 
195p 

NY 

Whyte,  Alexander 

An  account  of  the  trial  of  A.  Whyte,  for 
a  false,  malicious,  and  seditious  libel; 
of  which  charge  he  was  honourably 
acquitted  .  .  .  Newcastle   1793   19p 

NY 

[Baraly] 

Les  Jacobins  demasques,  suite  au  front 
de  Robespierre  et  de  sa  clique,  ou  la 
necessite  de  la  liberte  de  la  presse. 
n.t.p.    [Paris   1794]   8p 

NY 

Briellat,  Thomas 

For   seditious   words,      n.p.    1794 

[Bruce,   Archibald]    1746-1816 
Reflections    on    freedom    of   writing;    and 
the   impropriety  of  attempting   to   sup- 
press it  by  penal  laws.  .  .  .  Edinburgh, 
W.  Berry  1794  168p 

NY 

Case  of  libel;  the  King  v.  John  Lambert 
and  others,  printer  and  proprietors  of 
the  Morning  Chronicle  .  .  .  London. 
Printed  for  J.  Debrett  1794  68p 

Y 

Cursory  strictures  on  the  charge  delivered 
by  Lord  Chief  Justice  Eyre  to  the  grand 
jury,  October  2,  1794.  First  published 
in  the  Morning  Chronicle  October  21. 
London,   D.   L   Eaton   1794  5-52p 

TS 

Deals    with    high    treason    and    denounces    un- 
certainty  in   criteria   of  guilt. 

Eaton,  Daniel  Isaac,  d.   1814 

Hog's  wash    (Politics  for  the  people).   12 

nos.  n.p.   1794 
Trial    of    D.    I.    Eaton,    for    publishing   a 


48 


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Eaton,   D.  I.  —Continued 

supposed  libel,  intituled  Politics  for 
the  people;  or,  Hog's  wash  .  .  .  Lon- 
don,  D.   I.   Eaton    [1794]   62p 

NY 

Gerrald,  Joseph 

Trial  of  Joseph  Gerrald,  delegate  from 
the  London  Corresponding  societ3%  to 
the  British  convention,  before  the  High 
court  of  justiciary,  at  Edinburgh,  on 
thp  3d.  10th.  13th  and  14th  of  March, 
1794,  for  sedition  .  .  .  Edinburgh,  J. 
Robertson    [1794?]    2S6p 

NY  Y 

[Hardy,  Thomas] 

State  trials  for  high  treason.  Containing 
the  trial  of  Thomas  Hard5^  To  which 
is  prefixed  Lord  Chief  Justice  Eyre's 
charge  to  the  grand  jury.  Edinburgh, 
J.  Robertson  1794  270p 
TS 

Tried  for  treason  in  activities  of  Society  for 
Constitutional  information.  Thomas  Erskine  de- 
fended, and  Thomas  Paine's  Rights  of  Man 
figured    in    the    evidence. 

Jefferson,   Thomas,    1743-1826 

Notes  on  the  state  of  Virginia.     Philadel- 
phia,  M.   Carey  2d  Amer  ed   1794  336p 
TS 

Joyce,   Jeremiah,    1764-1816 

Sermon  preached  on  Sunday,  February 
the  23d,  1794  ...  to  which  is  added  an 
appendix  containing  an  account  of  the 
author's  arrest  for  "Treasonable  prac- 
tices," his  examination  before  His 
Majesty's  .  .  .  privy  council  .  .  .  Lon- 
don, Printed  for  the  author  1794  xv, 
48p 

TS 

Lambert,  John 

Case  of  libel,  the  King  v.  J.  Lambert  and 
others,    printer   and   proprietors    of   the 
Morning  Chronicle  .  .  .  London,  J.  De- 
brett  1794  68p 
NY 

Margarot,  Maiirice 

Trial  of  Maurice  Margarot,  before  the 
High  court  of  justiciary,  at  Edinburgh, 
on  the  13th  and  14th  of  January,  1794, 
on  an  indictment  for  seditious  prac- 
tices. Taken  in  shorthand  by  Mr  Ram- 
sey. London,  M.  Margarot  1794  186p 
NY 

Muir,  Thomas,  1765-1798 

An  account  of  the  trial  of  Thomas  Muir, 
esq.,  younger  of  Huntershill,  before  the 
High  court  of  justiciary  at  Edinburgh, 
on  30th  and  31st  days  of  August,  1793, 
for  sedition.  3d  Amer  ed  New  York', 
Printed  and  sold  by  S.  Campbell  1794 
viii,9-110p 

TS 

Rowan,  A.  H. 
Trial    for    having    published    a    seditious 
libel    against    George    III    of    England. 
Dublin    1794 


Skirying,   William 

Trial  of  William  Skirving,  a  secretary  to 
the  British  convention,  before  the  High 
court  of  judiciary,  on  the  6th  and  7th 
of  January,  1794,  for  sedition  .  .  .  Edin- 
burgh, J.   Robertson    [1794?]    168p 

NY 

Thewall,  John,  1764-1834 
Political  lectures;  on  the  moral  tendency 
of  a  system  of  spies  and  informers, 
and  the  conduct  to  be  observed  by  the 
friends  of  liberty  during  the  continu- 
ance  of   such   a   system.     London    1794 

Winterbotham,  William 

Trials  of  William  Winterbotham  for  sedi- 
tious words,     pam.     London   1794 

Woolley,  William 

Trials  ...  for  libel  on  Sir  Richard  Hill 
and   Rev  Rowland   Hill.     London   1794 

Hobhouse,  Sir  Benjamin 

Enquiry  into  what  constitutes  the  crime 
of  "composing  and  imagining  the  king's 
death,"  according  to  the  statute  of  Ed- 
ward III.  London,  Cadell  &  Davis 
1795  45p 
TS  W 

Holcroft.  Thomas,   1745-1809 

Narrative  of  the  facts,  relating  to  a  pros- 
ecution for  high  treason;  including  the 
address  to  the  jury,  which  the  court 
refused  to  hear:  with  letters  .  .  .  and 
the  defence  the  author  had  prepared, 
if  he  had  been  brought  to  trial.  2d  ed 
London,  Printed  for  H.  D.  Symonds 
1795  215p 

LC 

— Same.  London,  H.  D.  Symonds  1795 
136,  79p 

TS 

Deals    with    sedition    and    Society    for    consti- 
tutional   information. 

Joyce,  Jeremiah,   1764-1816 

Account  of  Mr  Joyce's  arrest  for  "Trea- 
sonable practices;"  his  examination  be- 
fore His  Majesty's  most  honourable 
privy  council;  his  commitment  to  the 
Tower,  and  subsequent  treatment;  to- 
gether with  remarks  on  the  speeches 
of  Mr  Windham,  etc.  2d  ed  rev  and 
enl.  London,  Printed  for  the  author 
1795   30p 

TS 

Manual  of  liberty;  or.  Testimonials  in  be- 
half of  the  rights  of  mankind  .  .  .  Lon- 
don.  H.   D.   Symonds   1795  x,406p 

NY  TS  Y 

Thewall,  John,  1764-1834 

Natural  and  constitutional  right  of  Brit- 
ons to  annual  Parliaments,  universal 
suflfragc,  and  the  freedom  of  popular 
association;  being  a  vindication  of  the 
motives  and  political  conduct  of  John 
Thewall  .  .  .  London,  The  author  1795 
96p 

NY  Y 


FREE  SPEECH 


49 


Varieties  of  literature,  from  foreign  jour- 
nals and  original  mms  2v  London,  J. 
Dcbrctt  1795 

TS 

"On  the  liberty  of  reasoning  on  matters  of 
belief,"  P43-IIS.  "On  the  liberty  and  licentious- 
ness of  the  press,"  p2S2-6;  both  by  Christopher 
Wieland. 

Wilks,   Mark,   1760P-1831 

Athaliah;  or.  The  tocsin  sounded  by- 
modern  alarmists;  two  collection  ser- 
mons towards  defraying  the  expense 
fsic]  of  the  defendants  in  the  late  trials 
for  high  treason  .  .  .  Norwich,  J.  March 
[1795?]    106p 

NY 

Baudin.  Pierre  Charles  Louis,   1748-1799 
ficlaircisscmcns    sur    I'article    355    dc    la 
Constitution,    et    sur    la    liberte    de    la 
presse.      Paris,    L'imprimerie    nationale 
1796  23p 

NY 

Cobbett,   William,    1762-1835 

Porcupine's  Political  censor  for  Nov.  and 
Dec.  1796  containing  observations  on 
the  insolent  and  seditious  notes  to  the 
United  States.     Philadelphia   1796 

TS 

Delaimay,   Joseph,   1746-1794 

Motion  d'ordre  fait  par  Delaunay  repre- 
sentant  du  peuple,  sur  la  liberte  de  la 
presse.  n.t.  [Paris,  L'imprimerie  na- 
tionale 1796] 

NY 

History  of  two  acts — entitled  Act  for  the 
safety  and  preservation  of  His  Majes- 
ty's person  and  government  against 
treasonable  and  seditious  practices  and 
attempts,  and  an  Act  for  the  more  ef- 
fectually preventing  seditious  meetings 
and  assemblies,  etc.     London  1796  828p 

Vindication  of  the  privilege  of  the  people, 
respect  to  the  constitutional  right  of 
free  discussion.  London,  Stockdale 
1796  80p 

B 

Mealmaker,  George 

Moral  and  political  catechism  of  man;  or, 
A  dialogue  between  a  citizen  of  the 
world  and  an  inhabitant  of  Britain;  to 
which  is  added  a  narrative  of  the  ar- 
rest .  .  .  and  imprisonment  of  the  au- 
thor for  supposed  treasonable  and  sedi- 
tious practices.  2d  ed  Edinburgh,  The 
author   1797  46p 

NY 

Smith,  John 

Trial  of  John  Smith,  bookseller  .  .  . 
December  6,  1796,  for  selling  a  work 
entitled.  "A  summary  of  the  duties  of 
citizenship."  London,  Mrs  Smith 
[1797]    viii,35p 

NY 

Cobbett,  William,  1762-1835 

Democratic  judge;  or.  The  equal  liberty 
of  the  press,  as  exhibited,  explained  and 
exposed  in  the  prosecution  of  William 
Cobbett,   for   a   pretended   libel   against 


the  king  of  Spain  and  his  ambassador, 
before  Thomas  M'Kean,  chief  justice 
of  the  state  of  Pennsylvania:  by  Peter 
Porcupine,  pseud.  I'hiladelphia,  W. 
Cobbett  1798  102p 

B  LC  NY  TS  Y 

Hawkes,   Sir  John 

Englishman's  right;  or,  A  dialogue  be- 
tween a  barrister  and  a  juryman  shew- 
ing the  antiquity,  the  excellent  designed 
use,  the  office  and  just  privileges  of 
juries  in  England  ...  to  which  is  pre- 
fixed an  introductory  essay  on  the 
moral  duty  of  a  judge;  by  Lord  Bacon. 
Philadelphia,   John    Thompson    1798 

JCP. 

O'Coigly,  James 
Trial  of  James  O'Coigly,  otherwise  called 
James  Quigley,  otherwise  called  James 
Fivey  .  .  .  for  high  treason,  under  a 
special  commission,  at  RTaidstone,  in 
Kent,  on  Monday  the  21st  and  Tues- 
day the  22d  days  of  May,  1798.  Taken 
in  shorthand  by  Joseph  Gurney.  Lon- 
don,  M.   Gurney  1798  539p 

NY 

Plain  facts  in  five  letters  to  a  friend  on  the 
present  state  of  politics;  in  which  are 
included  thoughts  and  observations — 
on  .  .  .  liberty  of  speech  .  .  .  London, 
J.  S.  Jordan  1798  105p 

NY 

Dyer,  George,   1755-1841 

Address  to  the  people  of  Great  Britain, 
on  the  doctrine  of  libels,  and  the  office 
of  juror.     London,  Geo.  Dyer  1799  120p 

NY 

[Hay,  George]   d.  1830 

Essay  on  the  liberty  of  the  press:  re- 
spectfully inscribed  to  the  republican 
printers  throughout  the  United  States; 
by  Hortensius,  [pseud.]  Philadelphia, 
Printed   at   the   Aurora   office    1799   51p 

LC 

Hughes,   Lewis 

Historical  view  of  the  rise,  progress,  and 
tendency,  of  the  principles  of  Jacobin- 
ism. London,  Printed  for  J.  Wright 
1799  90p 

TS 

Murray,   Lindley,    1745-1826 

(comp.)  Extracts  from  the  writings  of 
divers  eminent  authors,  of  diflferent 
religious  denominations;  and  at  various 
periods  of  time,  representing  the  evils 
and  pernicious  effects  of  stage  plays, 
and  other  vain  amusements:  with  some 
additions.  Philadelphia,  Reprinted  by 
Benjamin   &  Jacob  Johnson   1799  24p 

B 

Probably  Before  1800 

Publication    dates    of    the    following    were    not 
found. 

Arroyo  y  Herrera,  Carlos  de 

Enciclopedia  teatral  .  .  .  comprende  todas 
las  disposiciones  legales  vigentes  rela- 


50 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Arroyo   y    Herrera,   C.  — Continued 

tivas  a  propriodad   intelectual   y  policia 
de  espcctaculos.     n.p.,  n.d. 

HCL 

Bumet,  GUbert,  1643-1715 

Inquiry  into  the  measure  of  submission 
to  the  supreme  authority;  and  of  the 
grounds  upon  which  it  may  be  lawful 
or  necessary  for  subjects  to  defend  their 
religion,  lives  and  liberties,  n.t.p.,  n.p., 
n.d."  8p 

Collection  of  the  most  interesting  letters 
on  the  government,  liberty,  and  con- 
stitution of  England,  which  have  ap- 
peared in  the  public  papers,  from  the 
time  that  Lord  Bute  was  appointed 
First  lord  of  the  treasury,  to  the  death 
of  the  Earl  of  Egremont;  carefully 
corrected  and  illustrated  with  a  great 
number  of  original  remarks  and  notes. 
3v 

"In  these  volumes  are  contained  all  the  au- 
thentic papers  relative  to  the  North  Briton  and 
the  case  of  Mr  Wilkes;  examined  with  the 
originals." 

Collection  of  the  most  interesting  letters 
on  the  government,  liberty  and  consti- 
tution of  England;  which  have  occa- 
sionally appeared  in  the  public  press, 
from  the  death  of  the  late  Earl  of  Egre- 
mont to  the  present  time.    4th  v 

Discourse  on  government  and  religion,  cal- 
culated for  the  meridian  of  the  thirtieth 
of  January;  by  an  independent.  (In: 
Baron.  R.,  ed.  Pillars  of  priestcraft  and 
orthodoxy  shaken.  1768  3:329-418) 

NY 

Duckett,  Sir  George 

Penal  laws  and  Test  act;  questions  touch- 
ing their  repeal  propounded  in  1687-88, 
by  James  II,  from  the  original  returns, 
edited,  with  notes  and  observations, 
with  the  appendix.  2v  n.p.  Privately 
printed  1882-83 
— Same;  appendix  onlv.  n.p.  Privately 
printed  1883 

Half  an  hour's  conversation,  between  a 
churchman  and  a  Dissenter,  on  the  sub- 
ject of  the  Test  laws:  in  which  the 
propriety  of  repealing  them  is  plainly 
demonstrated.  Extracted  chiefly  from 
the  celebrated  speeches  of  Mr  Fox,  Mr 
Beaufoys  and  the  other  members  of 
the  House  of  commons  .  .  .  London,  J. 
Mathews   n.d. 'Sp 

TS 

Hall,  Robert,  of  Bristol,  1764-1831 

Impolicy  of  intolerance.  On  tolerance. 
On  the  right  of  worship.  (In  his:  En- 
tire  works.     1831.     3:357-406 

HCL 

Letter  of  several  French  ministers  fled  in- 
to Germany  ...  to  such  of  their  breth- 
ren in  England  as  approved  of  the 
king's  declaration  touching  liberty  of 
conscience;  tr.  from  the  French,  n.t.p., 
n.p.,  n.d. 


Letter  to  His  Royal  Highness  the  Duke  of 
Sussex  on  the  dinner  of  the  self-mis- 
named Friends  of  civil  and  religious 
liberty;  by  an  Orangeman,  n.p.  Printed 
for  J.  J.  Stockdale 

Mar-Prelat,  Martin 

Dialogue  wherein  is  plainly  layd  open 
the  tyrannical  dealing  of  lords  bishops 
against  gods  children  with  certaine 
points  of  doctrine,  wherein  they  approve 
theinselves  (according  to  Dr  Bridges, 
his  judgment)  to  be  truly  the  bishop 
of  the  devil;  published  by  the  worthy 
gentleman,  Dr  Martin  Mar-Prelat.  14 
leaves  (j,«^*^<S^  vuu-*^ 

[Neville,] 

Machiavel's  vindication  of  himself  and 
his  writings,  against  the  imputation  of 
impiety,  atheism,  and  other  high  crimes 
.  .  .  (In:  Baron,  R.,  ed.  Pillars  of 
priestcraft  and  orthodoxy  shaken.  4: 
247-77) 
NY 

Remarks  on  the  postscript  to  the  Case,  etc. 
[by  Israel  Mauduit] ;  in  a  letter  to  that 
gentleman;  being  a  full  and  faithful 
representation  of  the  proceedings  of 
those  ministers,  as  to  the  late  friend  to 
truth,  liberty,  and  charity.  2d  ed 
London,  Bladon  32p 

D 

Schwarz,  Wilhelm  Eberhardt 

Ein  gutachten  des  bayrischen  kanzlers 
S.  Eck  gegen  die  officielle  duldung  des 
Protestantismus  in  Oesterreich  (1568). 
(In:  Ehses.  Festschrift  zum  elfhundert- 
jahrigen  jubilaum  des  deutschcn  Campo 
Santo  in  Rom,  p234-41.  Freiburg 
1897) 
B 

[Scott,  J.?] 

Religious  and  political  liberty,  an  oration, 
and  other  tracts,  bound  in  one  volume, 
n.p.,  n.d. 

[Tindal,  Matthew]  1657P-1733 

Merciful  judgtncnts  of  High-Church  tri- 
umphant on  offending  clergymen,  and 
others  in  the  reign  of  Charles  I.  (In: 
Baron,  R.,  ed.  Pillars  of  priestcraft 
and    orthodoxy    shaken.      3:265-326) 

NY 

First    published    in    1710. 

Toleration  tolerated;  or,  A  late  learned 
bishop's  [Jeremy  Taylor's]  opinion  con- 
cerning toleration  of  religion;  with 
some  brief  observations  thereon.  Lon- 
don, n.d. 

HCL 

Toulmin,  Joshua,   1740-1815 

Manner  of  contending  for  the  faith,  con- 
sidered in  a  sermon  preached  at  Taun- 
ton. To  which  is  subjoined  a  letter 
to  the  Rev  Mr  Rooker,  occasioned  by 
his  late  sermon  on  the  same  subject. 
London,  J.  Johnson 

TS 


FREE  SPEECH 


51 


Trial  at  large  of  Thomas  Paine,  for  a  libel, 
in  the  second  part  of  Rights  of  man. 
Before  Lord  Kenyon  and  a  special  jury, 
in  the  court  of  King's  bench,  Guildhall. 
Dec.  18,  1792.  By  a  student  of  the 
Inner  Temple.  London,  Printed  for  J. 
Ridgway  n.d.  28p 

TS 

Includes   Thos.    Erskine's    address    in    defense. 

Trial  of  Sussannah  Fowler  of  Hammer- 
smith for  blaspheming  Jesus  Christ  and 


cursing  the  lord's  prayer;  and  who  also 
pretended  to  be  possessed  with  the 
devil,     n.p.,  n.d.     (Broadside) 

NY 

Underhill,  Edward  Bean 

(ed.)  Tracts  on  liberty  of  conscience  and 
persecution,  1614-1661;  edited  with  his- 
torical introduction.  London,  Printed 
by   T.    Haddon    1846   cxxviii,401p 

B    TS   Y 

Records   "the   first   articulations   of  infant   lib- 
erty." 


Part  II.     General  and  Historical  Discussions 


Items  arranged  alphabetically  under  name  of 
country  in   which  they  were  published. 

Includes  all  items  predominately  valuable  for 
generality  of  viewpoint  or  application.  If  more 
than  incidental  reference  is  made  to  specific  mo- 
tives for  censorship,  then  the  item  will  also  be 
included  under  such  head.  Where  insufficient 
information  was  at  hand  for  a  different  classi- 
fication, items  were  included  here 


British  Empire 


Belgium 


Duchaine,  Gustave 

Du   delit  de  presse  .  .  .   Bruxelles,   Bruy- 
lant-Christophe   &  co.     1866 
L 

Halewyck,   Michel 

.  .  .    Lc    regime    legal    de    la    presse    en 
Angleterre  .  .  .  Louvain,  C.  Peters  1899 
142p 
LC 

La   Boetie,  fitienne  de 

De  la  servitude  volontairc  ou  le  contr'un 
.  .  .  avec  une  preface  de  F.  de  Lamcn- 
nais.  Bruxelles,  L.  Hauman  &  cie  1836 
125p 

NY  Y 

Laurent,    Charles 

fitudcs  sur  les  delits  dc  presse.  Bruxelles, 
Bruylant-Christophe  1872 

Liberte  de  la  presse;  traduit  du  Hollandais. 

Brussel,  Brest  van   Kempen   1829  xi,49- 

86p 
NY 

Muquardt,  Charles,  1813-1863 
De    la    propriete    litteraire    internationale. 
de   la   contrefaQon.   et    de    la   liberte   de 
la  presse.    Bruxelles,  C.     Muquardt  1851 
vii.    [8]-62p 

Puissant,    Vital 

Compte  rendu  des  proces  de  presse  subis 
en  France  en  1868-1869  .  .  .  au  sujet 
d'ouvrages  intcrdits  et  condamncs  en 
France.     Bruxelles,  V.   Puissant   1871 

Van   Tricht,   Victor 

Liberte.      Causerie.      5th    ed     Namur.     P. 
Godenne   1895  72p 
NY 


Acton,  John  Emerich  Edward  Dalberg-Ac- 
ton,  1st  baron,  1834-1902 
History  of  freedom  and  other  essays; 
ed.  with  an  introduction  by  John  Ne- 
ville Figgis  and  Reginald  Vere  Lau- 
rence. London,  The  Macmillan  co. 
1907  xxxix,  638p 

Protestant    theory    of    persecution,    P150-87. 

Andrews,  William 

Old  time  punishments.  Hull,  W.  Andrews 
&  CO.;  London,  Simpkin,  Marshall, 
Hamilton,  Kent  &  co.     1890  245p 

TS 

"Punishing  authors  and  burning  books,"  pgo- 
103. 

Arber,  Edward 

English  reprints.  London.  A.  Murray  & 
son    1868 

Includes:  Milton,  J.  Areopagitica,  P29-80,  and 
A    decree    of    Starre    chamber. 

Axon,    William    Edward   Armytage,    1846- 
Milton  and  the  liberty  of  the  press.     (In: 
Milton    memorial    lectures,    1908.     p39- 
58    London    1909) 

B 

Plea  for  free  speech:  an  address  at  the 
inaugural  meeting  of  the  Manchester 
Eclectic  societv.  June  11th,  1872.  Lon- 
don. Triibner   [1872]    16p 

B    NY 

Bamford,   Samuel,    1788-1872 

Passages  in  the  life  of  a  radical.     London, 
Simpkin,  Marshall  &  co.     1844  2v 
LC  TS 

Interspersed  with  historic  data  on  violations 
of  right  of  assembly,  arrests  for  treason  and 
other  official  amenities  accorded  to  political  and 
industrial    reformers. 

Bannister,   S. 

Riglit  to  be  heard  upon  petitions  to  the 
crown,  in  cases  in  which  the  subject 
has  no  redress  except  by  reference  to 
the  privy  council.  F"isher's  Colonial 
Magazine  3:220-1  1843 
TS 

Deals    historically   with    the    right    of    petition. 

Bayley,  Harold 

New  light  on  the  renaissance  displayed 
in  contemporary  emblems.     London,  J. 


52 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Bayley,  Harold  — Continued 

U.  Dent  &  CO.;   New   York,  E.   P.   Dut- 
ton   &  CO.     n.  d.  270p 

Page   207   tells   of  James   I   proscribing   Nam's, 
History  of  Venice. 

Bayley,   Sir  John 

Speech  in  passing  sentence  on  Richard 
Carlile,  in  the  Court  of  King's  bench, 
Nov.  16,  1819,  for  publishing  "The  age 
of  reason"  and  for  reprinting  Palmer's 
"Principles  of  nature."     London   [1819] 

Belloc,    Milaire,    1870- 

Free  press.  London,  Allen  &  Unwin 
1918 

Bentham,  Jeremy,   1748-1832 

On   the    liberty   of   the   press,   and   public 
discussion.     London,  W.  Hone  1821  38p 
NY 

Blades,   William,    1824-1890 

Enemies  of  books.     2d  ed  London,  Triib- 
ner  &  co.     1880  xiii,  114p 
TS 

Chap.    S.    Destruction    of    books    thru    bigotry. 

Borthwick,  John 

Observations  upon  the  modes  of  pros- 
ecuting for  libel  according  to  the  lav\^ 
of  England.  London,  J.  Ridgway  1830 
44p 

NY 

Brief  appeal  to  the  royal  heir  to  the  throne 
.  .  .  occasioned  by  the  present  licen- 
tiousness of  the  press;  by  a  commoner, 
n.p.   1809  28p 

Brougham  and  Vaux,  Henry  Peter 
Brougham,  1st  baron,  1778-1868 
Taxes  on  knowledge;  stamps  on  news- 
papers; extracts  from  the  evidence  of 
the  Right  Honorable  Baron  Brougham 
and  Vaux,  lord  high  chancellor  of  Eng- 
land before  the  Select  committee  of 
the  House  of  commons,  on  libel  law, 
in  June  1834;  in  which  the  evil  to  society 
from  the  stamp  duty  on  newspapers 
.  .  .  [is]  clearly  shown.  London, 
Printed  by  J.  R.  and  C.  Childs,  and  sold 
bv  R.  Heward,  at  the  office  of  the 
Westminster    review    [1834]     [8]p 

LC 

Buchanan,  William,   1781-1863 

Statement  of  facts  for  conservatives  and 

the    public.       Edinburgh,     Alyles     Mac- 

phail  1860  26p 
NY 


Cartwnright,  John 

English    constitution   produced   and   illus- 
trated.     London,    Printed    by    Richard 
Tavlor  and  sold  by  T.  Cleary  1823  xx, 
446p 
TS 

Contains  good  free  speech  matter  especially 
P3S0-64;  104,  IIS,  122.  Approved  by  Thomas 
Jefferson  in  letter  to  Cartwright.  Free  speech 
matter  republished  as  appendix  to:  Schrocder, 
T.  Methods  of  constitutional  construction;  with 
biographical  introduction  not  included  in  en- 
larged   edition. 


Censorship  of  the  press  in  Turkey.     Nine- 
teenth   Century    36    1894 

Chateaubriand,     Frangois     Auguste     Rene, 

vicomte  de,   1768-1848 
On    the    censorship    recently    established 

by   the   act   of   March    17,    1822.     2d    ed 

London   1824  59-72p 
B 

Cobbett,  William,  1762-1835 

Trial  of  republicanism;  or,  A  series  of 
political  papers  proving  the  injurious 
and  debasing  consequences  of  repub- 
lican government  and  written  constitu- 
tions; with  an  introductory  address  to 
the  Hon  Thomas  Erskine,  esq.  Lon- 
don,   Cobbett    and    Morgan    1801    63p 

NY  Y 

Has   some   matter   on   freedom   of   the   press   in 
America.  '! 

Coleridge,   Samuel  Taylor,   1772-1834 

[Duty  of  the  communication  of  truth;  a 

free   press    and    the    law    of   libel.]    (In 

his:  The  friend:  a  series  of  essavs  .  .  . 

London,   William   Pickering   1837    1:38- 

128) 
NY 

Collet,  Collet  Dobson 

History  of  the  taxes  on  knowledge;  their 
origin      and      repeal;      introduction     by 
George   Jacob    Holvoake    .  .  .    London, 
T.    F.   Unwin   1899  2v 
LC  NY  TS  Y 

History  of  newspaper  stamp  taxes  in  England. 

Dawbam,  Charles 

Public  and  the  press.  English  Review 
21:490-6  Dec,  1915 

DTsraeli,  Isaac 

Curiosities  of  literature,  new  ed  London, 
Warde,   Lock   &  co.     p.d.   1839  578p 

Pages  250-5:  Licensers  of  the  press;  428-33: 
Expression  of  suppressed  opinion;  463-7:  Tolera- 
tion. 

Miscellanies  of  literature,  new  ed  Lon- 
don, Ward,  Lock  &  co.     p.d.  1840  484p 

Pages    132-5:    Danger    incurred    by    giving    the 

result     of    literary     inquiries;     254-60:     Political  1 

criticism     on     literary     composition;     346-7:     The  j 

Sabbatarian    controversy.  j 

Ditchf^eld,  Peter  Hampson,   1854-  | 

Books  fatal  to  their  authors.     London,  E.  ; 

Stock    1895    XX,    244p 
LC  NY  TS 

Contents:  Theology;  Fanatics  and  free- 
thinkers; Astrology,  alchemy  and  magic;  Science 
and  philosophy;  History;  Politics  and  statesman- 
ship; Satire;  Poetry;  Drama  and  romance;  Book- 
sellers and  publishers;  Some  literary  martyrs; 
Index. 

Historical    treatment. 

Donisthorpe,    Wordsvsrorth,    1847- 

Law   in   a   free   state.      London   and   New 
York.  The  Macmillan  co.     1895  xii,312p 
LC  TS  Y 

Duckworth,    Lawrence 

Complete  summary  of  the  laws  relatmg 
to  the  English  newspaper  press.     Lon-  j 

don,   Effingham  Wilson  1899  42p  j 

NY  i 


FREE  SPEECH 


53 


Erskine,  Thomas 

Speeches  of  the  Hon  Thomas  Erskine  of 
subjects  connected  with  the  liberty  of 
the  press  and  against  constructive 
treason.     London   1810  3v 

Essays  on  the  formation  and  publication 
of  opinions,  and  on  other  subjects.  3d 
ed  rev  and  enl  London,  J.  Green  1837 
viii,311p 

TS 

Freedom    of    discussion    favored,    pi 2040. 

Extension  of  postal  regulations  throughout 
the  British  empire.  Fisher's  Colonial 
Magazine  3:450-7   1843 

TS 

Faithful  history  of  the  late  discussions  in 
Bengal,  on  the  power  of  transportation 
without  trial,  assumed  as  a  right  by  the 
supreme  government  of  India,  to  be 
exercised  on  any  Englishman  who  may 
honestly  avail  himself  of  the  freedom 
of  the  press,  as  by  law  established, 
with  copies  of  the  official  correspond- 
ence between  W.  B.  Baylev,  esq.  and 
Mr   Buckingham.     Calcutta   1823  22,  8p 

NY 

Famous  pamphlets:  Milton's  Areopagitica; 
Killing  no  murder;  De  Foe's  Shortest 
way  with  the  Dissenters;  Steele's 
Crisis;  Whatcly's  Historic  doubts  con- 
cerning Napoleon  Buonaparte;  Copies- 
ton's  Advice  to  a  young  reviewer;  with 
an  introduction  by  Henry  Morley.  2d 
ed.  London,  G.  Routledgc  &  sons  1890 
316p 

TS 

Fisher,  Joseph  R.,  and  Strahan,  James  An- 
drew 
Law  of  the  press;  a  digest  of  the  law 
specially  affecting  newspapers  .  .  . 
London,  W.  Clowes  &  son  1891  xxvi, 
297p 

NYLI 

Ford,   Douglas   M. 

Growth  of  the  freedom  of  the  press. 
English    Historical    Review   4:1-12    1889 

Y 

Fowell,   Frank,   and    Palmer,   Frank 

Censorship  in  England;  its  history  from 
the  fifteenth  centurv.  London,  Frank 
Palmer    [19131    xii,390p 

HCL    LC    NY    TS 

ThcTter,   sex,   religion,   industrial    and   political. 
Historical    and    thoro. 

Gentz,  F[riedrich]   von,  1764-1832 

Reflections  on  the  liberty  of  the  press  in 
Great    Britain;    tr.    from    the    German. 
Pamphleteer    (London)    15:455-96    1819 
B   LC  Y 
Gosse.  Edmund 

Censorship  of  books.     English  Review  4: 
616-626     1910;     Living     Age     265:131-8 
April    16,    1910 
Gray,  John^  1816-1875 

Extension    of   the   circulation    and    conse- 
quent utility  of  the   North    British   Ad- 
vertiser.     Edinburgh    1860    I5n 
NY  6  P 


Great    Britain.    Legation.    Germany 

.  .  .  Despatches  from  His  Alajesty's  am- 
bassador at  Berlin  respecting  an  official 
German  organisation  for  influencing  the 
press  of  other  countries  .  .  .  London, 
H.M.  Stationery  office,  Harrison  & 
sons    1914   8p 

LC 

Great  Britain.  Stage  plays  (censorship) 
committee 
Report  from  the  joint  committee  of  the 
House  of  lords  and  the  House  of  com- 
mons .  .  .  together  with  proceedings 
of  the  committee,  minutes  of  evidence 
and  appendices  ...  2  November,  1909. 
London,  Wyman  &  sons,  ltd.  1909 
375p 

NY 

Grey,  James  Gratton 

(comp.)  Freedom  of  thought  and  speech 
in  New  Zealand,  a  serious  menace  to 
liberty;  the  story  of  the  Boers,  things 
worth  knowing.  Wellington,  Wright 
&  Grcnside  1900  5-80p 

Y 

Haeckel,  Ernst  [Heinrich  Philipp  August] 
1834- 
Freedom  in  science  and  teaching;  from 
the  German,  with  a  prefatory  note  by 
T.  H.  Huxley.  London,  K.  Paul,  Tench, 
Triibner  &  co.     1892  xxxi,121p 

NY 

For    so    great    a    man    this    is    a    disappointing 
defense    for    academic    freedom. 

— Same.     London.  K.  Paul,  Trench,  Triib- 
ner   &    CO.      1879    xxxi,121,32p 
TS 

Hake,  Alfred  Egmont,  and  Wesslau,  O.  E. 

Coming   individualism.      Westminster,    A. 
Constable  &  co.   1895  xi.347p 
LC  NY  Y 

Chapter    8:    Free    trade    in    amusements,    dis- 
cusses   censorships. 

Halfam,    Henry,    1777-1859 

Introduction  to  the  literature  of  Europe, 
in  the  fifteenth,  sixteenth  and  seven- 
teenth centuries,  new  ed  London,  J. 
Murray  1882  4v 

LC 

Contains   a   little   scattered   data   of   checks   on 
literature. 

— Same,    complete  in  Iv.     London.  Ward, 
Locke   &  CO.     n.d.  847p 
TS 

Hargreaves,  William 

Revelations  from  Printing-House  square: 
is  the  anonymous  system  a  security  for 
the    purity    and    independence    of    the 
press?     London    1864 
HCL 

Harvey,  John   Hyatt 

Four  lectures:  on  civil  liberty  and  ex- 
pansion of  intellect,  as  connected  with 
human  happiness;  delivered  at  the 
Philosophical  institution  of  Walsall  .  .  . 
London,  Longman.  Brown,  Green  & 
Longmans    1845   222p 

LC 


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Hume,  David 

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LC  NY  Y 

Joyce,   Herbert 

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Kelly,  Richard  J. 

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[Law  of  libel — state  of  the  press;  review 
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Review  35:566-609  1827 

Y 

The  book  Mence  here  reviewed  is  one  of  the 
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[Law  of  libel  and  liberty  of  the  press;  re- 
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Lewis,  Sir  George  Comewall,  1806-1863 
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NY 

Libel  and  freedom  of  the  press.     Quarterly 

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HCL 


[Liberty  of  the  continental  press;  review 
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Y 

Liberty  of  the  press;  a  letter  from  the  King 
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[Liberty  of  the  press;  review  of  Memoires 
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Lieber,   Francis,    1800-1872 

On    civil    liberty    and    self    government. 
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NY 

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LC  TS 

Convicted   under    newspaper    stamp    act. 
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Lytton,  Edward   Robert  Bulwer-,   1st  earl, 
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Liberty  of  the  press:  an  old  fable.     Fort- 
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Y 

MacCarthy,    Desmond 

Censorship  of  plays.     New  Quarterly  Re- 
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McCullagh,   Francis 
Portuguese      republic      and      the      press. 
Dublin    Review   154:314-29  April,    1914 
RGS  '07-15 

Mackinnon,  James 

History      of      modern      liberty.      London, 
Longmans,   Green   &  co.   1906  924p  2v 

The  origins  of  modern  liberty;  Growths  of 
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free  cities;  Religions  and  social  revolt  in  Bo- 
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On   the   doctrine   of  libels,    London    1792. 
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B 


FREE  SPEECH 


55 


Masson,  David,  1823-1907 

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tical   and    literary   history   of   his    time. 
London  1858-79  6v 
Mence,  Richard 

Law   of  libel.    London,   A.   Maxwell    1824 
vi,209p 
NYLI 

An  excellent  defence  of  larger  intellectual 
liberty. 

Mendham,  Joseph,  1769-1856 

Literary  policy  of  the  Church  of  Rome 
exhibited,  in  an  account  of  her  damna- 
tory catalogues  or  indexes,  both  pro- 
hibitory and  expurgatory.  .  .  .  2d  ed 
much  enl  London,  J.  Duncan  1830 
xxxvi,371p 

LC  NY  TS  Y 

Supplement  to  The  literary  policy  of  the 
Church  of  Rome,  exhibited  in  an  ac- 
count of  her  damnatory  catalogues  or 
indexes,  etc.  2d  ed  1830  .  .  .  London, 
J.   Duncan   1836  34p 

Y 

An  additional  supplement  to  The  literary 
policy  of  the  Church  of  Rome  .  ... 
London,   Duncan    &   Malcolm   1843  40p 

Y 

Mill,  James,   1773-1836 

Essays  on  government,  jurisprudence, 
liberty  of  the  press,  and  law  of  na- 
tions. Written  for  the  supplement  to 
the  Encyclopaedia  Britannica  and 
printed  by  permission  of  the  proprie- 
tors of  the  Encvlopaedia.  London, 
Printed  by  J.  Inncs  [1828?]  32,  41,  34, 
33p 

LC  NY 

Article  Liberty  of  the  press,  reprinted 
from  the  supplement  to  the  Encyclo- 
pedia Britannica.  [London,  Printed  by 
J.   Innes   1825?]    34p 

B  NY 

Reprinted  by  Free  speech  league,  New  York, 
1913,   with  introduction   by  Theodore   Schroeder. 

Mill,  John  Stuart,  1806-1873 
On  lil)crtv.  London,  J.  W.  Parker  &  son 
1850  20'7p 
NY  TS  Y 

Mill  makes  a  fine_  general  argument  for  free 
speech  but  would  abridge  when  the  circumstances 
are  such  as_  "to  constitute  their  expression  a 
positive  instigation  to  some  mischievous  act." 
That  has  been  the  justification  for  every  cen- 
sorship. 

Free  speech  part  of  Mill's  essay  is  included 
in    Schroeder,    T.     "Free    press    anthology." 

In  his  "Autobiography,"  (New  York,  Holt, 
1874)  P251-6,  Mill  gives  an  account  of  the 
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of    the    importance    of    that    performance. 

Milton,  John,  1608-1674 

Areopagitica;  a  defence  of  the  liberty  of 
unlicensed       printing.       (In:       Famous 
pamphlets,   pll-81.) 
TS 

For   earlier   editions   see:    17th   century. 
— Same;    with    prefatory    reinarks,    copious 
notes  and  excursive  illustrations,  by  T. 
Holt    White,    esq.;    to    which    is    sub- 


joined, a  tract  Sur  la  liberte  de  la 
presse,  imite  de  I'anglois  de  Milton, 
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Hunter  1819  cxlix,311p 

LC  NY 

—  Same;  ed.  with  introduction  and  notes 
by  J  W.  Hales  .  .  .  2d  ed  rev  Oxford 
[England]  Clarendon  press  1878  xliv, 
159p 

Y 

— Same,  preceded  by  illustrative  docu- 
ments; carefully  edited  by  Edward 
Arber.  London,  A.  Murray  &  son  1868 
80p 

NY   Y 

— Same;  with  a  commentarjr  by  Sir 
Richard  C.  Jebb,  and  with  supplemen- 
tary material.  Cambridge,  University 
press  1918  xl,130p 

LC 

— Same.    Retrospective    Review   9:1-19 

A   review   of   Milton's   essay   given   in    an   his- 
torical  setting. 

Mirabeau,  Honore   Gabriel  Riquetti,  comte 

de.  1749-1791 
Sur    la    liberte    de    la    presse,    imite    de 

I'anglois  de  Milton.   (In:   Milton,  John. 

Areopagitica.  p263-311    London   1819) 
LC  NY  Y 
— Same.      (In     his:      Oeuvres     chioses     de 

Mirabeau.    p385-427    London    1821) 
NY 
Modern  ideals  and  the  libertv  of  the  press. 

Dublin  Review  81:191-222  1877 
Y 

Montague,  Francis  Charles,   1S58- 

Limits    of    individual    liberty;    an    essay. 
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LC   HCL   TS 

Liberty    of   action    and    discussion,    chap.    7. 

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TS 

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History  of  the  post-office  packet  service 
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LC  NY  Y 


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FREE  SPEECH 


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NY 

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TS 

Chapter  36:  Liberty  of  the  press.    (Defended.) 

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HCL  Y 

Symon,  James   David 

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weekly,  or  monthly,  secular  and  reli- 
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of  their  production  from  wood-pulp  to 
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NY 

Verses  written  in  the  portico  of  the 
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on  placing  before  it  the  statutes  of 
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LC 
Bolivia.  Laws,  statutes,  etc. 

.    .    .    Reglamento  de  imprenta  de  la  Re- 

publica    de    Bolivia.    La    Paz,    Imprenta 

del  estado   1900   16p 
LC 
Caro,    M[iguel]    A[ntonio] 

Libertad    de    imprenta;    articulos    publi- 

cados  en  "La  Nacion"  en  1888.  Bogota, 

"La  Nacion"  1890  143p 
LC 

Figueroa,    Pedro    Pablo,    1857- 

Problemas   americanos;    fronteras    ameri- 

canas.   Cuba  redimida;   libertad   escrita. 

Santiago  de  Chile,   Impr.  Portena  1895 

lOlp 
LC  Y 

Mexico   (Federal  district)) 

Manifiesto  que  hace  el  gobierno  del  Dis- 
trito  federal,  sobre  los  sucesos  ocurri- 
dos  con  motive  del  alistamiento  de 
jurados,  prevcnido  por  el  articulo  45 
de  la  ley  de  14  de  octubre  del  presente 
ano.  Mexico,  Impr.  del  Aguila,  dirigida 
por  J.  Ximeno  1828  [21]p 
LC 

Spain.  Laws,  statutes,  etc. 

Reglamento  para  el  uso  de  la  libertad  de 
imprenta.    [Mexico    1821?]    24p 
Y 

Terrada,  Carlos  de 

Memoria  sobre  la  libertad  de  imprenta. 
[Buenos   Ayres   1832]    6p 

B 

Vargas,  Ignacio   Romero,   1835- 

Libertad  de  imprenta;  discursos  pronun- 
ciados  por  el  senador  ...  en  las 
sesiones  de  los  dias  24,  25,  y  27  de 
noviembre  de  1882,  y  voto  particular 
del  mismo  como  miembro  de  la 
Comision  de  puntos  constitucionales. 
Mexico,  Tip.  literaria  de  F.  Mata  1882 
64p 

LC 

Zuviria,  Facundo 

La    prensa    periodica.    Montevideo,    Im- 
prenta de  La  Repiiblica  1857  172p 
LC 


Cuba 

Spain.  Laws,  statutes,  etc. 

Ley  de  doce  de  noviembre  de  1820, 
sobre  libertad  de  imprenta.  Habana, 
Imprenta  de  Pedro  Nolasco  Palmer  e 
hijo  1821  32p 
Real  decreto  y  reglamento  para  la  cen- 
sura  de  obras  y  periodicos.  Matanzas 
[Cuba]  1835  31p 
B 


[Agoult,    Charles    Constance    Cesar    Loup 

Joseph  Mathieu  d']    1747-1824 
Essai  sur  la  legislation  de  la  presse;  par 

I'auteur  de  Lettres  a  un  Jacobin.  Paris, 

A.   Egron   1817  S3p 
LC 
Allard,  Paul 

Julien    I'apostat    et    la    liberte    de     I'en- 

scigncment.   Correspondant  ns   197:875- 

94  1899 

Araujo,  Oscar  d' 

La  question  de  I'enseignement  libre  au 
Bresil.  Revue  Occidentale  2  serie  20: 
62-72   1900 

Barbier,  Georges,  1854- 

Code  explique  de  la  presse;  traite 
general  de  la  police  de  la  presse  et  des 
delits  de  publication.  2  ed,  Complete- 
ment  refondue  et  mise  au  courant  de 
al  doctrine,  de  la  legislation  et  de  la 
jurisprudence,  par  Paul  IMatter  .  .  . 
et  J.  Rondelet  .  .  .  Paris,  Marchal  & 
Godde   1911  2v 

LC 

Bauer,  Arthur 

Transformation    des      idees    et   le    public. 
Revue    Philosophique    63:383-408    1907 
Y 

Bazille,   C,  and   Constant,   Charles 

Code   de   la   presse;    commentaire   theori- 

qu;  pratique  de  la  loi  du  29  juillet  1881. 

Paris  1883 
HCL 

Beaussire,  fimile 

La    liberte     dans    I'ordre    intellectuel    et 
moral,   etudes   de   droit  naturel.     Paris, 
Durand    &   Pedone-Lauriel    1866 
L 

Behaghel,   Arthur  Alexandre 

Liberte    de    la    presse,    ce    qu'elle    est    en 
Algerie.      Paris,    Dentu    1863 
L 

Belanger,  Auguste 

L'enseignement  libre  et  I'unite  morale  de 
la  nation.  Etudes  Publiees  par  des 
Peres  de  la  Compagnie  de  Jesus  81: 
300-27    1899 

Beuf,  Joseph 

Paillases     tricolores;     suivi     d'une     lettre 
adressee     au     garde-des-sceaux     le     24 
juillet  1832.   Paris,  Imprimerie  Marathon 
1832  35p 
NY 

Bidoire,   Pierre 

Liberte    d'enseignement    avant    et    depuis 
le  XIXe  siecle.    Reforme  Sociale  4  serie 
7:680-97   1899 
Y 

Billault,  Adolphe  Augustin  Marie 

Discussion   de   la   loi   sur   la   presse;    dis- 

cours.       Paris,     Imprimerie     imperiale 

1861  43p 
HCL 


FREE  SPEECH 


59 


Biston,  P. 

Comment  on   respecte   la   liberte   d'ecrirc 
en  France.     Paris,  Dentu   1871 
L 

Bonald,  Louis   Gabriel  Ambroise,  viscount 
de 

De  I'opposition  dans  le  gouvernement  et 
de    la    liberte    de    la    presse.      Paris,    A. 
Le    Clcrc    &   cie    1827 
HCL 

Bonnassies,  Jules 

La    censure    dramatique.      Paris,    Sagnier 
1873 


Bourgeois,  Emile 

Liberte  d'enseigncment.  Grande  Revue 
24:15-51,  338-380   1902 

Brayer,  Felix 

(comp.)  Loi  annotee  du  11  mai,  1868  sur 
la  presse,  ou  manuel  complet  renfermant 
.  .  .  toutes  les  dispositions  en  vigeur 
sur  la  presse  periodique.  I'imprimerie 
.  .  .  etc.  Grenoble,  Prudhomme  [1869] 
80p 
B 

Brunetiere,  Ferdinand 

Etudes    critiques    sur   I'histoire   de   la   lit- 
terature  frangaise.    3rd  ed  Paris,  Hach- 
ette  &  CO.     1889 
HCL 

Contains    a    chapter:    La    librairie    sous    Male- 
sherbes    (17SO-1763) 

Buisson,  F. 

Le  droit  d'enseigner.     Revue  Politique  et 
Parlementaire  36:446-71    1903 
NY  Y 

Calmet,  Alberic 

Liberte  du  theatre  en  France  et  a  I'et- 
rangcr:  histoire,  fonctionnement  et  dis- 
cussion de  la  censure  dramatique. 
Paris,  Dujarric  &  cie   1902  383p 

B 

Cartault,  A, 

Quclques  reflexions  sur  la  liberte  d'en- 
seigncment. Revue  International  de 
I'Enseignement  44:489-96   1902 

Censure   dramatique:    [administration    thea- 

trale.]      Paris   1873 
HCL 

Same.     2d  ed  Paris,  A.  Sagnier   1873 


Chassan,  Joseph   Pierre 

Traite  des  delits  et  contraventions  de  la 
parole,  de  I'ecriture  et  de  la  presse  .  .  . 
2  ed.  augm.  dun  commentaire  des  lois 
sur  la  presse  depuis  le  24  fevrier  1848 
.  .  .  Paris,  Videcoq  fils  aine  1851  2v 
Y 

Chassin,  Charles  Louis 

La    presse    libre    selon    les    principes    de 
1789.     Paris,  Pagnerre  1862 


Chateaubriand,     Frangois     Augusta     Rene, 
vicomte    de,    1768-1848 
.  .  .  Melanges  politiques.  t.  3.     Polemique. 
Paris,  Pourrat  freres  1838  332p 
Y 

His.    Oeuvres  completes.    Paris  1836-1839  V28. 
Contains    author's    Opinion    sur   le   projet   de   loi 
rclatif  a  la  police  de   la  presse. 
.  .  .  Opinion  et  discours.     Paris,  Pourrat 
freres   1837  339p 
Y 

His   Oeuvres  completes.     Paris   1836-1839   V30. 

Opinion   sur  le  projet  de   loi  relatif  a  la 
police  de  la  presse.     2d  ed  Paris  L'ad- 
vocat  1827  104p 
NY 
Chenier,   Marie-Joseph 

De  la  liberte  du  theatre  en  France.    Revue 
d'Art   Dramatique   10:721-32 
Cherot,   Henri 

La    campagne    de    1880    contre    la    liberte 
d'enseigncment.       Le     Carnot     15:82-94 
1903 
Chotteau,  Leon 

De    la    liberte    des    theatres;    cet    ecrit    a 
obtenu  une  mention  honorable  au  con- 
cours    ouvert    par    I'Academie    de    Bor- 
deaux.     Paris,    E.    Dujardin    1865    160p 
L    NY 
Claretie,  Jules 

La    censure.      Nouvelle    Revue    34:433-44 
1905 
Y 

Constant,  Charles 

Code  des  theatres  a  I'usage  des  direc- 
teurs,  des  artistes,  des  auteurs,  des 
maires  et  adjoints  de  la  magistrature 
et  du  barreau,  contenant  un  expose  des 
principes  juridiques  .  .  .   Paris   1876 

HCL 

Same.  2d  ed  Paris,  A.  Durand  1882  viii- 
x,356p 

NY 

Constant   [de  Rebecque,   Henri]   Benjamin, 

1767-1830 
Questions  sur  la  legislation  actuelle  de 
la  presse  en  France,  et  sur  la  doctrine 
du  ministere  public,  relativement  a  la 
saisie  des  ecrits,  et  a  la  responsabilite 
des  auteurs  et  imprimeurs.  Paris, 
[Impr.  de  Renaudiere]  1817  99p 
LC  NY 

Cottu,   [Charles]   b.   1777? 

Observations  sur  le  nouveau  projet  de  loi 
relatif  a  la  police  de  la  presse.     Paris, 
Mame   &  Delaunay-Vallee   1827  70p 
NY 

Reflexions  sur  I'etat  du  jury,  de  la  liberte 
individuelle,  et  des  prisons,     Paris  1818 
Y 

Coulon,  Henri,  1855- 

De  la  liberte  de  la  presse;  commentaire 
de  la  loi  du  28  juillet  1894,  precede  d'une 
introduction  contenant  un  projet  de 
loi  sur  I'application  du  jury  en  matiere 
correctionnelle.  Paris,  Marchal  &  Bil- 
lard   1894  414p 

LC 


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[Lionne] 

Chambre    non    prostituee;    proces    de    la 
Tribune   contre   les   deputes   .  .  .    Paris, 
Bureau  de  la  Tribune   [1833]  36p 
NY 

Locre,  [Jean  Guillaume]  baron,  1758-1840 
Discussions  sur  la  liberte  de  la  presse, 
la  censure,  la  propriete  litteraire,  I'im- 
primerie et  la  librairie,  qui  ont  eu  lieu 
dans  le  Conseil  d'etat,  pendant  les  an- 
nees  1808.  1809,  1810  et  1811.  Paris, 
Garnery  1819  300p 
LC  NY 

.  .  .  Loi  de  la  presse:  Discours  de  MM  Eu- 
gene Pelletan,  Jules  Simon,  Jules  Favre, 
Ernest  Picard,  Garnier-Pages,  Gueroult, 
Riondel,  Berryer,  Carnot;  avec  le  text 
de  la  loi  votee  le  9  mars  1868,  par  le 
Corps  legislatif.  Paris,  Degorce-Cadot 
[1868]  299p 
LC 
Madrolle,    Antoine 

Les  dangers  d'une  prolongation  de  la 
liberte  absolue  de  la  presse,  demonstres 
par  les  sophismes  de  ses  defenseurs,  ou 
la  refutation  du  dernier  discours  de  M 


de  Chateaubriand,  avec  le  texte  tout 
entier  de  ce  discours  en  regard.  Paris, 
Adricn  le  Clcre  &  cie  [1828]  xxviii, 
141p 

NY 

Maffert,  Louis 

La  censure  theatralc  en  Allegne  et  en 
Italic.  Grande  Revue  3:241-55  1904 

Mailhor,  Jean  Baptiste 

Conspiration    judiciaire    contre    I'indepen- 
dance  de  I'avocat,  la  liberte  de  la  presse 
et  la  libre  defense  de  soi-meme.   Paris 
1817 
HCL 

Malesherbes,    Chretien    Guillaume    de    La- 
moignon  de 

Memoire  sur  la  liberte  de  la  presse.  Paris, 
Pillet   1814  xii,l78p 
B 

Marchegay,   Henri 

La  liberte  des  proudhoniens,  des  liberaux, 
c'est  I'esclavage.  Paris,  Pache  1869 
L 

Matagrin,  Amedee 

Histoire  de  la  tolerance  religieuse;  evol- 
ution d'un  principe  social.  Paris,  Fisch- 
bacher   1905  447p 

B 

Menier,  fimile  Justin 

La  liberte  sans  licence;  ou  La  liberte  de- 
vant  I'opinion  publique.  Paris,  Plon  1871 
L 

Merillon, 

La    presse    et   le    droit    commun.      Revue 
Politique   et  Litteraire   12:545-52  1899 
NY  Y 

Mermet,  fimile 

La  presse,  I'affichage  et  le  colportage;  his- 
toire et  jurisprudence  .  .  .  Paris   [1881] 
HCL 

Merson,  Ernest 

La  liberte  de  la  presse  et  la  Republique. 

Paris,  Dcntu  1867 
La   liberte    de    la   presse    sous    les   divers 
regimes.    Paris,   Amyot   1874 

Mirabeau,  [Honore  Gabriel  Riquetti]  comte 

de,   1749-1791 
Oeuvres  choisies  de  Mirabeau.  Paris,  Bris- 
sot-Thwais  1821 

NY 

OUivier,  fimile 

La   liberte    de    la   presse    au    corps   legis- 

latif.  Revue  des  Deux  Mondes  188:127- 

55   1905 
Y 

Peignot,  Gabriel  i.e.  fitienne  Gabriel,  1767- 
1849 
De  la  liberte  de  la  presse  a  Dijon  au  com- 
mencement du  XVIIe  siecle;  ou,  His- 
toire de  limpression  d'un  opuscule  en 
patois  bourguignon,  public  en  1669,  sur 
la  demolition  du  chateau  de  Talant. 
Paris   1836   12p 

HCL 


FREE  SPEECH 


63 


Pelletan,  Eugene  i.  e.  Pierre  Clement  Eu- 
gene, 1813-1884 
Le   droit   de   parler;    lettrc   a   M    Imhaus. 
Paris,  Pagnerre  1862  46p 

LC 

Persigny,  J.   G.  Victor  Fialin 

Lettre  sur  la  liborte  dc  la  prcsse,  ad- 
dresse  aux  journaux.  Paris,  Dcntu  1868 

Petit,  G.  Albert 

Essai  sur  la  condition  legale  dcs  jour- 
naux; formalites  speciales  prescritcs 
par  la  loi  pour  la  publication  des  jour- 
naux ou  ecrits  periodiques,  avec  un 
appcndice  contenant  le  tcxte  de  la  loi 
du  11  mai  1868  sur  la  presse  et  les  cir- 
culaircs  ministerielles  des  2  et  4  juin. 
Paris,  Marescq  aine  1868 

Petkoff,  Petko 

La  presse  en  Bulgarie.  Paris,  E.  Larose 
1910   357p 

NY 

Poitou,  Eugene  Louis,   1815-1880 

Du  roman  et  du  theatre  contemporains 
et  de  leur  influence  sur  Ics^nioeurs  .  .  . 
Paris,  Augusta   Durand    1857  351p 

Y 

La   presse.    [Paris,   fiverat   1831]    21p 

NY 

Principes  de  1789  et  la  liberte  de  la  presse. 
Paris,   Lemerre   1867 

Puibaraud,  Louis 

Legislation    sur   le    droit    de    reunion    en 
France.  Paris  1880  31p 
HCL 

Quinet,   Edgar 

Le   droit   d'asile.    (In   his:    Oeuvres   com- 
pletes. 26:59-73   1879) 
HCL 

Richter,   Leon 

Le  tocsin.  Paris  1869  48p 
HCL 

Rocquain,  Felix  L  e.  Theodore  Felix,  1833- 

L'esprit   revolutionnaire   avant   la   revolu- 
tion,   1715-1789.    Paris,    E.    Plon    &    cie 
1878  xi,S41p 
LC  Y 

[Roger,] 

Dcs  pamphlets,  de  leur  nature,  et  de  leur 
danger;    par   un    observateur   impartial. 
[Paris,   Pellicier   1814]    16p 
LC 

Roland    de   Villargues,   Jean   Joseph   Fran- 

Sois 
Code    des   lois    de    la    presse    interpretees 

par    la    jurisprudence    et    la    doctrine. 

Paris,    Plon    1863 
L 

Les  codes  crimincls  intcrpretes  par  la 
jurisprudence  et  la  doctrine,  suivis  d'un 
formulaire  contenant  les  qualifications 
legales  des  crimes  et  delits  adoptees 
par  la  chambre  des  mises  en  accusation 
de  la  cour  imperiale  de  Paris  .  .  .  Paris, 
Plon  1863 


Les  codes  criminels  interpretes  par  la 
jurisprudence  et  la  doctrine,  suivis  d'un 
formulaire  de  la  chambre  dcs  mises  en 
accusation  et  de  la  cour  d'assises,  du 
code  dc  lois  sur  la  presse  .  .  .  Paris, 
Marescq  aine  1869 

Rousset,  Gustave 

(comp.)  Code  general  des  lois  sur  la 
presse  et  autres  moyens  de  publication, 
comprenant  les  lois  reglementaires  de 
I'imprimerie,  de  la  presse  periodique, 
de  la  librairic  .  .  .  des  theatres,  etc. 
Paris,  Cosse,  Marchal  &  cie  1869  [5] 
339p 

B 

Nouvcau  code  annote  de  la  presse,  pour 
la  France,  I'Algcrie  et  les  colonies;  ou 
Concordance  synoptique  et  annotcc  de 
toutes  les  lois  sur  rimprimcric,  la  li- 
brairic, la  propriete  littcraire,  la  presse 
periodique,  le  colportage,  I'affichage,  le 
criage,  les  theatres,  et  tous  autres 
moyens  de  publication,  depuis  1789 
jusqu'a   1856.   Paris,   Cosse   1856 

L 

Royer-Collard,    [Pierre   Paul]    1763-1845 
Opinion   sur  le  projet  de  loi  relatif  a  la 
police    de    la    presse.    Paris,    Baudouin 
freres  1827  lOp 

NY 

S.,  H. 

Bossuet  et  la  liberte  de  la  presse.  Bib- 
liographic   Moderne    2:201-2    1898 

Sarada  y  Salvany,  Felix 

Le  libcralisme  est  un  peche;  questions 
brulantes;  traduit  de  I'espagnol  par 
Mme  la  Marquise  de  Tristany;  suivi  de 
la  lettre  pastorale  des  eveques  de  I'e- 
quateur  sur  le  liberalisme.  Paris,  Retaux 
Bray  1888  275p 

NY 

Schuermans,  Henri 

Code  de  la  presse  .  .  .  Bruxelles,  Bruy- 
lant-Christophe;  Paris,  Durand  1861 

L 

Scorraille,  R.  de 

Le  projet  de  loi  Chaumie  contre  la  liberte 
d'enseigncment  I'egalite  des  grades. 
Etudes  Publiees  par  des  Peres  de  le 
Compagnie  de  Jesus  94:289-313  1903 

Secretan,  Charles 

La  pliilosophie  de  la  liberte  .  .  .  2v  2d  ed 
Paris,  V  1  Durand:  Neuchatcl:  v  2  San- 
doz   &   Fischbacher   1866;   1872 

L 

Segur,   Louis   Gaston  de 

La   liberte.    Paris,   Tolra    1869 
L 

Senigon,  Toussaint 

La  liberte.  Paris,   Hatin   1875 
L 

Sighele,  Scipio,  1868- 

.  .  .  Litterature  et  criminalite;  tr.  de  1'- 
italicn,  par  Erick  Adler,  preface  de 
Jules  Claretie  .  .  .  Paris,  V.  Giard  & 
E.  Briere  1908  vi,222p 

LC  NY 


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B  LC  NY  Y 

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NY  Y 

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B  LC  NY 

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Y 

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Y 

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Uber  theatcrzensur.  Deutsche  Revue  4: 
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LC 

Liehl,  Otto 

Umfang  der  zeugenpflicht  der  presse  und 
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NY 

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NY 

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Pressgesetz  nebst  den  gesetzen  liber  das 
urheberrecht,  dem  musterschutz,  mark- 
neschutz-  und  patentgesetz;  textaus- 
gabe  mit  kurzen  anmerkungen  _  und 
sachregister;  hcrausgegebcn  von  einem 
praktischcn  juristen.  Leipzig,  P.  Reclam, 
jr.  1883  134p 

B 


Roslin,  Karl  Ludwig  Christoph 

Kritische  vcrsuchc  iiber  den  Zeitgeist,  die 
press-freiheit  und  geschwornen-gerichte. 
Esslingen,  M.  Seeger  1819  vii,216p 

NY 

Roth,  Carl 

Biicherzenzur  im  alten  Basel.  Zentral- 
blatt  fiir  BibHothekswescn  31:49-67  1914 

NY 

Russdorf,  Robert  von 

Zeugnisverwcigerungsrecht  der  deutschen 
volkstreter  .  .  .  Greifswald,  J.  Abel  1911 
40p 
Y 

Schaffer,  Kurt  Oskar,  1884- 

Die  leipziger  biicherkommission  al-szensur- 
behorde  1800-1815;  auf  grunde  der  akten 
des  stadtischen  archivs  zu  Leipzig  .  .  . 
Borna-Leipzig    1911    ix,63p 

Y 

Schletter,  Hermann  Th[eodor]  1816-1873 
Handbuch  der  deutschen  press-gesetzge- 
bung;  sammlung  der  gesetzlichen 
bestimmungen  iiber  das  literarische 
eigenthum  und  die  presse  in  alien  deut- 
schen bundesstaaten,  nebst  geschicht- 
licher einleitung  .  .  .  Leipzig,  G.  F. 
Steinacker  1846  xxxii,352p 

LC 

Schroeder,  Eduard  August 

Das   recht   der  freiheit;   kritisch,   system- 
atisch  und  kodifiziert  ...  Leipzig,  Ross- 
berg  &  Berger  1901  xiii,657p 
NY 

Schwarze,    Friedrich    Oskar 

Das  reichs-pressgesetz  vom  7  mai  1874. 
Erlangen,  Palm  &  Enke  1874  163p 

NY 

[Skork,  Ernst  von] 

Censur  und  confiscation  von  druck- 
schriften  .  .  .  nebst  einem  .  .  .  entwurf 
eines  censuredicts,  von  einem  staats- 
practiker.  Braunschweig,  Im  verlags- 
comtoir   1829  xviii,178p 

Y 

Steinschneider,  Moritz 

Censur  hebriiische  biicher  in  Italien.  (In: 
Hebraische  bibliographic.  6:68-70) 

Thilo,  Eugen,    1873- 

Pressfrciheit  und  preussische  verfassungs- 
reform  in  der  "Breslauer  zeitung"  wah- 
rend  der  jahre  1837-46.  Breslau,  Druck 
von  R.  Nischkowsky  1907  75p 

LC  Y 

Verein  deutscher  zeitimgsverleger,  Hanover 
.  .  .  Das  presstrafrecht  .   .     .Magdeburg, 
The  author  1912  259p 

LC 

Volsing,   Karl 

Das  vereins-und  versammlungsrccht  in 
grosshcrzogtum  Hessen;  seine  ge- 
schichtliche  entwickelung  und  gegen- 
wartigc  gestaltung.  Inaugural-disserta- 
tion Gressen  1902 
HCL 


FREE  SPEECH 


67 


Welcker,  Carl  Theodor 

Ncuer  beitrag  zur  lehre  von  den  injurien 
und  der  pressfreiheit  .  .  .  Freiburg,  Ge- 
briider  Groos  1833  254p 
Y 

Die  vollkommene  und  ganze  pressfreiheit 
nach  ihrer  sittlichen,  rechtlichen  und 
politischcn  nothvvendigkeit,  und  ihrcr 
iibereinstimmung  mit  doutschen  fiirstcn- 
wort  und  nach  ihrer  volligen  zeitgemiis- 
sigheit  dargcstellt  .  .  .  Freiburg,  Uni- 
versitats-buchhandlung  der  gebriider 
Groos   1830  viii,160p 


Weller,  Emil  [Ottokar] 

Falschcn  und  fingirtcn  druckortc;  repcr- 
torium  der  seit  erfindung  der  buch- 
druckerkunst  unter  falscher  firma  er- 
schcinenen  schriften;  dcutscher  und 
lateinischcr  theil  .  .  .  zuglcich  der 
"maskirten  literatur"  zweiter  theil. 
Leipzig,  Falcke  &  Rossler  1858  v,200p 
LC  Y 

WiUmy,  Max,  1890- 

Impressum  der  zeitung.  (Der  druckver- 
merk  auf  zeitungen  und  zeitschriften 
nach  den  §§6  und  7  des  pressgcsetzes) 
.  .  .  Nurnberg,  Buchdr.  F.  Willmy  1912 
63p 

LC 

Wolff.  Paul  Friedrich,  1888- 

Parlamentarische  redefreiheit  und  zeugen- 

pflicht    .  .  .    Borna-Leipzig,    R.    Noske 

1911    xii,76p 
Y 

Zaretzky.    Otto,    1863- 

Dcr  crstc  kolner  zensurprozess;  ein  bei- 
trag zur  kolner  geschichte  und  inkun- 
abelkunde,  .  .  .  mit  einer  nachbildung 
des  Dialogus  super  libertate  ecclcsias- 
tica,  1477.  Koln,  M.  Du  Mont-Schau- 
bcrg  1906  vi,124p 

LC 

Zimmermann,  F.  W.  Rudolph 

Parlamentarische  redefreiheit  und  der 
schutz  dritter  gegen  den  wissbrauch 
derselben.  Zeitschrift  fitr  die  Gesanite 
Staatswissenschaft   63:392-453    1907 

Zimmermann,  Friedrich 

GrundbcgrifFc  des  franzosisch-bclgischen 
pressstrafrechts  und  ihre  vcrwertung 
fiir  die  beurteilung  des  deutschen  reiclis- 
pressgesetzes.  Breslau,  Schletter  1907 
lOOp 
NY 

ZoUner,    Friedrich 

t)ber  die  frcihcit  der  wisscnschaft  und  die 
nothwendigheit  einer  sittlichen  wieder- 
geburt  des  deutschen  gcistes.  (In  his: 
Wissenschaftliche  abhandlungcn.  2:1111- 
72   1878) 

NY 


Zung,   Leopold 

Die   ccnsur   hebraischer  werke.    (In:    He- 
briiische    bibliographic.    1:42-4    1858) 
NY 

Reprinted    in    his    Gesammelte    schriften,    vol- 
ume  3,   pages   239   to   241. 


Italy 


Brevi  considcrazioni  sopra  una  lunga  let- 
tera  del  Sig  M.  Massimo  d'Azeglio. 
fn.p.    Roma?    1847]    8p 

B  LC 

Buniva,  Guiseppe 

Liberta'  della  stampa  negli  Stati  Sardi. 
Torino,  Tipografia  Paravia  &  co.  1850 
23p 

NY 

Canneti,  Costantino 
Liberta  di  stampa  e  diritti  d'autore.  [Mon- 
dovi,   G.   Mantova,   1897]    [17]-36p 
LC 

Cavazzoni    Pederzini,    Fortimato 

Sopra  il  tema  proposta  dalla  R.  Accad- 
emia  di  scienze,  lettere  ed  arti  di  Mo- 
dena  ne'  seguenti  termini:  Dimostrare 
co'  migliori  argomenti  i  mali  della 
stampa  licenziosa,  ed  i  vantaggi  della 
ben  regolata;  e  quindi  la  neccssita  di 
una  savia  censura.  [Modena  1845]  66p 
LC 

Cenni,  Enrico 

Delia  liberta  considerata  in  se  stessa,  in 
relazione  el  diritto,  alia  storia,  alia 
societa  moderna  e  al  progresso  dell' 
umanita.  Napoli  1891 

HCL 

Crivellari,  Guilio 

La  stampa;  osservazioni  critico-legisla- 
tive  e  proposte  dell'  aw.  Guilio  Crivel- 
lari .  .  .  Venezia,  P.  Naratovich  1868  xiv, 
456p 

LC 

Ferrari,   Celso 

Liberta  politica  e  il  diritto  intcrnazionale; 
saggio  d'interpretazione  sociologica 
della  storia.  Torino,  Roux  Frassati  & 
CO.   1898  viii,340p 

NY 

Gentile,   Giovanni 

L'Unita  della  scuola  secundaria  c  la  lib- 
erta degli  studi.  Rivista  Filosofica  5: 
196-218  1902 

Liberta  della  stampa.   n.p.,  n.d.   Broadside 
NY 

Luzzatti,  Liugi,   1841- 

Liberte  de  conscience  et  de  science.  1910 

Manzi,  Alberto 

Foscolo,  la  censura  teatrale  e  il  governo 
italico  (con  documenti  d'archivio  inediti 
e  raris).  Revista  d  Italia  1:565-656  1912 

Mareo,  A.  de  Viti  de 

II  parlcmento  contro  la  liberta  di  stampa. 
Giorale  degli  Economisti  18:260-78  1899 
Y 


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HCL 

Odescalchi,  Antonio 

Sopra  tenia  proposto  dalla  R.  Accademia 
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seguenti  termini:  Dimostrare  co'  mig- 
liori  argomcnti  i  mali  della  stampa 
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lata;  c  quindi  la  necessita  di  una  savia 
censura  .  .  .  [Modena  1845]  15p 
LC 

Pagani,  Pietro 

L'istituto  della  prcscrizione  e  il  delitto 
d'  inguirie.  Revista  di  Diritto  Penale 
Anno  3:501-61   1902 

Paquet,  Benjamin 

Le   liberalisme.   2e   ed    Rome    1877 
HCL 

Radu,    Rosetti 

Despre  censura  in  Moldova.  Academia 
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Rossi,    Georgio 

La  collezione  Giordani  della  Biblioteca 
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"Catalogo  di  una  ricca  collezione  di  libri  e 
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Fumagalli,    no.    7093 

Scapinelli,  Enrico 

...  La  stampa  e  il  gcrente  responsabile. 
Bologna,    Stab.    tip.    succ.    Monti    1889 
80p 
LC   NY 

Tirelli,   Luigi 

Sopra  il  tema  proposto  dalla  R  Accademia 
di  scienze,  lettere  ed  arti  di  Modena  ne' 
seguenti  termini:  Dimostrare  co'  mig- 
liori  argomenti  mali  della  stampa  li- 
cenziosa, cd  i  vantaggi  della  ben  rego- 
lata;  c  quindi  la  necessita  di  una  savia 
censura.  .  .  .  [Modena  1845]  71p 
LC 

Zanettini.   Gio[vanni]   Battista 

Sopra  il  tenia  proposto  dalla  R.  .Ac- 
cademia di  scienze,  lettere  ed  arti  di 
Modena  ne'  seguenti  termini:  Dimos- 
trare co'  migliori  argomenti  i  mali  della 
stampa  licenziosa,  ed  i  vantaggi  della 
ben  regolata;  e  quindi  la  necessita  di 
ima  savia  censura;  dicorso  .  .  .  [Modena 
1845]  34p 
LC 

Netherlands 

Aken-Maastrichtsche    spocrweg-maatschap- 
Pij 

.  .  .   Statuten.     Acte  van   concessie.   Acte 
van   afstand  der  domaniale  stecnkolen- 
mijnen  te  Kerkrade.   Maastricht,  A.  H. 
Roberts    1846    [107]p 
LC 


Albert,  A.  H. 

Gedachte  over  de  vrijheid  van  onder- 
wijs.  .  .  Amsterdam,  Johannes  van  der 
Hey  &  zoon   1848  24p 

NY 

Andringa  de  Kempenaer,  Regnerus  Livius 
van 
Een  ernstig  woord  aan  de  Nederlandsche 
natie,  ter  zake  van  hoon-en  lasterschrif- 
ten,  met  het  oog  op  de  ingestelde 
procedures  voor  den  Hoogen  Road 
der  Nederlanden,  tegen  de  erfgenamen 
van  Wylen  Koning  Willeni  II.  Graven- 
hage,  J.  &  H.  van  Langenhuysen  1850 
16p 

NY 

Bodel  Nijenhuis,  J[ohannes]  T[iberius] 
1797-1872 
Wetgeving  op  drukpers  en  boekhandel 
in  de  Nederlanden  tot  in  het  begin  der 
XlXde  eeuw^.  Vertaling  van  de  "Dis- 
sertatio  historica-juridica  de  juribus  typo- 
graphorum  et  bibliopolarum  in  regno 
belgico'"  aan  de  Leidsche  hoogeschool 
verdedigd  door  J.  T.  Bodel  Xyenhuis. 
Amsterdam,  P.  N.  van  Kampen  &  zoon 
1892  425p 

LC 

Clempby, 

De  Paris,  et  de  quelques  ecrits  qui  s'y 
publient;  reponse  a  la  Revue  de  Paris, 
a  la  Revue  des  Deux  Mondes,  etc. 
Amsterdam,  L.  van  der  Vinne  1836  106p 

NY 

Crottet,  E. 

.  .  .  Supplement  a  la  5""'  edition  du 
Guide  de  I'amateur  de  livres  a  figures 
du  XVIIP  siecle  .  .  .  Amsterdam,  F. 
V.   Crombrugghe  1890  xp,320  col. 

LC 

Drukpers     in     Nederlandsch     Indie.     Zalt- 
Bommel,  Joh.  Norman  &  zoon  1857  52p 
NY 

Green  van  Prinsterer,  G[uillaume] 

Aan  G.  Graaf  Schimmelpenninck,  minister 
van  staat  .  .  .  over  de  vrijheid  van  on- 
derw^ijs.  "s  Gravenhage.  W.  P.  van 
Stockum   1848   117p  3   stuken  in    1 

NY 

Hasselt,  W[illem]  J[an]  C[omelis]  van, 
1795-1864 
Beschouwing  over  het  voortdurend  bes- 
taan  van  art;  283,  284  en  289  van  het 
Wetboek  van  strafregt.  (Eene  druk- 
persquestie)  Amsterdam,  J.  C.  van 
Kesteren  &  zoon  1861   [5]-26p 

LC 

Heusde,  A[ndreas]    C[ornelius]    van 

Vrijheid  der  drukpers  hier  te  lande  uit 
een  historisch  oogpunt.  Haarlem,  J. 
B.   van    Loghem.  jr.    1847  37p 

LC  NY 

Hoeven,  A.  van  der 

Vrijheid  van  onderwijs,  het  schrikbeeld 
dezer  dagen  .  .  .  Amsterdam,  J.  M.  E. 
Meijer  1848  24p 

NY 


FREE  SPEECH 


69 


Hofstede   de    Groot,   Petrus 

Bedenkingen  over  de  zoogenoemde  vrij- 
heid  van  onderwijs;  afzonderlijk  afge- 
druckt  uit  de  Groninger  Courant  van 
den  20  November  1840  en  latere  dagen; 
met  eenige  vermeerderingen.  Gron- 
ingen,  C.  M.  van  Bolhuis  Hoitsema  1840 
ISp 
NY 

Kluit,  Willem  Pieter  Sautijn,   1838-1894 
Arnhemschc    couranten.      Amsterdam,    P. 
N.  van  Kampen  &  zoon  1892  148p 

LC 

Nagelatcn  geschriften  van  Mr  W.  P. 
Sautijn  Kluit;  het  Algemeen  handels- 
blad,  1828-1865;  geschicdcnis  der  Neder- 
landsche  dagbladpers  tot  1813.  Am- 
sterdam, P.  N.  van  Kampen  &  zoon 
1896  284p 

LC 

Nieuwsbladen  voor  den  boekhandel. 
(Nieuwsblad  v.  d.  boekh. — Weekblad  v. 
d.  boekh. — De  Kolporteur  e.  a.)  (In: 
Bijdragen  tot  de  geschicdcnis  van  den 
Nederlandschen  boekhandel.  2:[1]-128 
Amsterdam   1885 

LC 

Kniseman,  A[rie]  C[omeUs]  1818-1894 
De  Fransche  wetten  op  de  Tlollandsche 
druckpers  1806  tot  1814.  (Ovcrgcnomcn 
uit  de  Bijdragen  tot  dc  geschiedenis 
van  den  Nederlandschen  boekhandel.) 
Amsterdam,  P.  N.  van  Kampen  &  zoon 
1889  270p 

LC 

Langenhuysen,  A.  P.  van 

Memoire  presente  a  la  Seconde  chambre 
des  fitats-Generaux  pour  combattre  la 
loi  du  10  avril  1815,  I'arrete  du  20  avril 
1815,  et  la  loi  du  6  mars  1818;  avec  Ics 
pieces  relatives  a  la  poursuite  .  .  . 
traduit  .  .  .  par  T.  Olivier-Schilperoort. 
La  Haye,  Freres  Langenhuj^scn  1828 
50p 

NY 

Netherlands  (Kingdom)  1815-  Laws,  stat- 
utes, etc. 

Metliodiekc  verzameling  van  de  wetsbc- 
palingen,  de  administrative  bcslissingen 
en  de  regtspraak  omtrent  het  zegelrcgt, 
op  drukwerken  en  advertcntien  en  het- 
gcen  verder  betrekking  heeft  op  den 
boekhandel.  's  Gravcnhage.  Gebroeders 
Belinfante    1867    viii.l40p 

LC 

Wetten  en  verordeningcn  nopcns  den 
boekhandel  en  de  drukpers  in  Xcdcr- 
land.  's  Gravenhage,  J.  Belifantc  1834 
viii,70p 

LC 

Quelques  observations  sur  le  projet  de 
loi  tendant  a  restreindre  la  liberte  de 
la  presse.  La  Haye,  L'imprimerie  Bcl- 
gique   1816  23p 

NY 


R..  E.  R. 

Noodige  ophelderingen  op  de  missive  van 
...    H.    Calkoen    aan    ...    F.    A.    v.    d. 
Kemp.   Amsterdam    1785   24p 
NY 
Scheltema,  Johann  Friedrich 

De    opiumpolitick    der    rcgecring    en    de 
vrijheid  der  drukpers  in    Xederlandsch 
Indie.  .  .  's   Gravcnhage,  Stockum   1903 
[7]    I52p 
B   Y 
Schimmel,  Gerard  Willem 

Beschonwingen    over    de    periodieke    pers 
in  verband  met  de  verantwoordelijkheid 
voor  drukpersdelictcn  .  .  .  .Amsterdam, 
F.  Muller  &  co.   1882   165p 
NY 
Snijders,  J.  B. 

Bedenkingen  over  de  vrijheid  der  druk- 
pers, in  twee  vcrhandelingcn,  voor- 
gelezen  in  het  Zeeuwsch  genootschap 
der  vs^etenschappen  te  Middelburg. 
Middclburg,  Gebrocder  Abrahams  1829 
41p 
LC 

Stem  uit  limburg  over  de  aanstaande  vrij- 
heid    van     onderwijs.       Maastricht,     S. 
Trouillart    Hanssen    n.d.    12p 
NY 
Tree,  F.  J.  van 

Derde  brief  .  .  .  aan  .  .  .  Matthys  Siegen- 
beek,    over    de   vrijheid    van    onderwijs. 
Leyden,  J.  W.  van  Leeuwcn   1841   112p 
NY 

Vrijheid  van  onderwijs?  Een  brief,  behel- 
zende  eenige  bedenkingen  over  dit 
ondcrwerp,  bij  de  aanstaande  beslissing 
van  het  belangrijke  vraagstuk.  Gron- 
ingen,  W.  Zuidema  1840  31p 

NY 

Wallez,  J.  B.  G. 

Memorie,  aan  de  Hceren  leden  der 
Kamer  van  Beschuldiging,  bij  het  Hoog- 
Geregtshop  te  's  Gravenhage.  's  Gra- 
venhage, Nederlandsche  drukkerij  1818 
28p 

NY 

Memoire  presente  a  Mm  les  mcmbres  de 
la  Chambre  de  mises  en  accusation,  de 
la  Cour  superieure  de  justice  a  La  Haye. 
La  Have,  l'imprimerie  Belgique  1818 
29p 

NY 

Willemsen.   W. 

Vrijmoedige  gcdachten  over  vrijheid  van 
onderwijs,  en  concurrentie  in  metzelve 
in  het  Koningrijk  der  Nederlanden. 
Tiel,  C.  Campagne  1848  17p 

NY 


Norway,  Sweden   and  Denmark 

Alexanderson,    Nils 

Foreliisningar  ofver  den  svcnska  tryck- 
frihetsprocessen.  Uppsala  &  Stockholm, 
Almqvist  &  Wiksells    [1907]    ix.234p 

NY    LC 


70 


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[Arvidsson,  Adolf  Ivar]    1791-1858 

Rest-ransakning  mcd  den  s.  k.  fria  pres- 
scn;  (anstald  af  Thorgcir  Ostgothe 
[pseud.]  Stockholm,  P.  A.  Norstedt  & 
soner   1839  124p 

LC 

Benzelstiema,  Gustav 

G.  Benzelstjerna's  censorjournal,  1737- 
1746,  utg.  af  L.  Bygden  och  E.  Lewen- 
haupt.  [Stockholm,  Kongl.  boktry- 
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HCL  NY 

Betaenkninger  over  de  forel^bige  Udkast 
til  trykkefrihedsforordinigen  af  1799. 
Meddelte  af  Louis  Bobe.  Danske  Maga 
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Dagens  handelser,  bedomde  af  en  landtman. 
Upsala,   Sv.   P.   Leffler   1838  24p 

NY 

Flodstrom,  I. 

Tryckfrihetsforordningens  §  2  mom.  4 
och  deklarationstrang.  Statsvetenskap- 
lig  Tidskrift  for   Politik   1:226-33   1899 

Holm,  Peter  Edvard 
Offentlige   mening  og  statsmagten   i  den 
dansknorske  stat  i  slutningen  af  det  18 
de    aarhundrede     (1784-1799).     Kj^ben- 
havn    1888  202p 

LC 

Peterson,  Matthias  Conrad,  1761-1833 
Justitsaction  mod  Matthias  Conrad  Peter- 
son i  Trondhjem;  med  alt,  hvad  som  i 
sagen  er  passeret  for  retterne.  Dram- 
men,  Trykt  hos  C.  F.  Rode  1823  [193]- 
227,186p 

LC 

Reuterskiold,  C.  A. 

Om  atalsralt  och  svarandeplikt  i  tryck- 
frihetsmal?  Statsvetenskaplig  Tidskrift 
for  Politik-Statistik-Ekonomi  1:51-75 
1898 

Selskabet  for  trykkefrihedens  rette  Burg. 
Love  for  selskabet  .  .  .  saaledes  sim  de 
ere  blevne  antagne  paa  gcneralforsam- 
lingen  .  .  .  1835  og  modificerede  paa 
generalforsamlingerue  .  .  .  1836  .  .  . 
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NY 


Spain 


Discurso  sobre  la  libertad  de  la  imprenta, 
y  observacioncs  sobre  algunos  articulos 
del  decreto  de  las  Cortes  generales  y 
extraordinarias  de  10  de  noviembre  de 
1810;  por  S.  D.  M.  Madrid,  Impr.  de 
Vega   &   CO.    1820   24p 

Lalama,  Vincente  de 

Indice  general  de  cuantas  obras  drama- 
ticas  y  liricas  han  sido  aprobadas  por 
la  Junta  de  ccnsura  y  censores  de  oficio 
para  todos  los  teatros  del  reino  y  de 
ultramar,  1850-1866;  reccdido  de  los 
decrctos  sobre  propriedad  literaria. 
Pinto  1867 
HCL 


M.,  D.  J.   I. 

Memoria  sobre  la  libertad  politica  de  la 
imprenta  .  .  .  Sevilla,  D.  Manuel  Munoz 
Alvarez    1809  32p 
NY 
Minteguiaga,  Venancio 

La    legislacion    represiva    de    la   imprenta 
en  Espano.  Razon  y  Fe  8:345-56;  9:73-85 
1904 
La    libertad    de    imprenta    y    la    legalidad 
vigente  de   Espana.     Raz6n  y   Fe  8:20- 
36  1904 
Philippine  Islands.   Gobemador   general 
Reglamento     de     asuntos     de     imprenta 
decretado  por  el  excmo.  sr.  gobernador 
politico    superior    de    estas    islas    en    16 
de  febrero  de   1857.   [Manila]    M.   Ram- 
irez 1857  [Madrid,  Viuda  de  M.  Minuesa 
de   los   Rios   1895]    26p 
LC  Y 
Spain.   Laws,  statutes,  etc, 

Reglamento  para  el  uso  de  la  libertad  de 
imprenta.   n.t.p.   San   Lorenzo    1820  41  1 
NY 

Spain.    Laws,  statutes,  etc.,    1874-1885    (Al- 
fonso XII) 
Ley   de    imprenta    para   la    isla    de    Cuba. 
Madrid,  Imprenta  nacional  1881  28p 
LC 

Us6z  i  Rio,  Luis  de 
Un   Espanol  en  la  Biblia;  i  lo  que  puede 
ensenarfios.   n.p.    [186-] 
HCL 

Switzerland 

Buhler,  M. 

Pressfreiheit    und    strafrechtliche    verant- 

wortlichkeit  der  schweizerischen  presse. 

(In:  Verein  der  schweizerschen  presse. 

Schvveizer   presse.    pl85-202    Bern,   Jent 

&  CO.  1896) 
Egger,  Augustinus 

Ein  antiker  Spiegel  fiir  journalisten.   (In: 

Die    Schweizer    presse,    herausgegeben 

von  Verein  der  schweizerischen  presse. 

Bern,  Jent   &  co.   1896 

Pages    55-8,    "Das    ewige    gesetz." 

Muller,   Karl,    1879- 

Geschichte    der    zensur    im    alten     Bern. 
Bern,  K.  J.  Wyss  1904  208p 
LC    NY 
Muller,  Max 

Lehr-und     Icrnfreiheit     ...     St.     Gallen, 
Zollikofer  &  cie  1911  286p 
NY 

Pfau,   Ludwig 

"Das  preussische  regiment"  vor  gericht; 
rede  gehalten  zu  seiner  verthcidigung 
vor  dem  stadtgericht  zu  Frankfurt  a. 
M.   Ziirich,   I.  Schabelitz   1877  23p 

NY 

Schenk,   Conrad 

Der  wahrheitsbeweis  bei  injurien  nach 
schweizerischem  recht.  Zurich,  Gebr. 
Leemann  &  co.   1908  116p 

NY 


FREE  SPEECH 


71 


\ 


Schmid,  Robert 
Die  strafrechtliche  verantwortlichkeit  fiir 
pressvergehen.     Zurich,     F.     Schulthess 
1895    145p 
LC 
Verein  der  schweizerischen  presse 

Schweizer  press.  Bern,  Jent  &  co.  1896 
520p 

Includes  papers  by  Agger,  Augustinus,  and  by 
M.  Buhler.     See:  Agger;   Buhler. 

Wettstein,    Oscar,    1866- 

Uber  das  verhaltnis  zwischen  staat  und 
presse  mit  besonderer  beriicksichtigung 
der  Schweiz;  ein  beitrag  zur  lehre  von 
der  pressfreiheit  .  .  .  Ziirich,  A.  Miiller 
1904  94p 

LC 


United  States 

Abbott,   Lyman 

Knoll     papers.     Have     teachers     special 
privileges?  Outlook  118:478-9  March  27, 
1918 
RG  '18 

Academic  freedom.  Scientific  American  117: 

450    Dec    15,    1917 
RG  '18 

Academic  freedom;  extract  from  President 
Lowell's  report.  School  and  Society  7: 
619-22  May  25,  1918 

RG  '18 

Academic   freedom  again.    Scientific   Amer- 
ican  118:50  Jan   12,   1918 
RG  '18 

Academic    freedom    and    academic    tenure. 

Science  n  s  43:92-3  Jan  21.  1916 
RG  '16 

Academic  freedom  at  Harvard.  School  and 

Society  7:82-3  Jan   19,   1918 
RG   '18 

Ackerly,  WUliam  White 

Constitutional  freedom  of  speech  and  of 
the  press.  Case  and  Comment  22:457-60 
Nov,   1915 
IT„P  .'15 

Adams,   Edward  F. 

Newspaper  work.  L  Limitations  of  truth- 
telling.  Arena  20:604-14   1898 
Y 

Adams,   John    Quincy,    1767-1848 

Speech  upon  the  right  of  the  people  to 
petition;  on  the  freedom  of  speech  and 
of  debate;  on  the  resolutions  of  seven 
state  legislatures,  and  the  petitions  re- 
lating to  the  annexation  of  Texas. 
Washington,  Gaics  &  Scaton  1838  131p 

B  NY  Y 

Aiken,  John  F. 

History   of  liberty;   a   paper   read   before 
the   New   York   historical   society,    Feb. 
6,  1866.  New  York.  A.  S.  Barnes  &  co. 
1877 
HCL 


Aiken,   Samuel   Clark 

Theatrical   exhibitions;   a   sermon.   Cleve- 
land, O.,  Penniman  1836  17-19p 
B 

—Same.  Utica,   N.Y.   1825  24p 
Y 
Aldis,   H.  G. 

Book-trade,     1557-1625.     (In:     Cambridge 
history   of    English    literature.   4:432-73. 
New  York  and  London,  G.  P.  Putnam's 
sons    1909) 
TS 

Some    historical    bits    of    early    censorship. 

Alexander,    Charles    Beatty,    1849- 

Moral  science  and  academic  freedom. 
Lexington,  Va.,  Washington  and  Lee 
university  1913 

uses 

Alexander,   Hartley   Burr,   1873- 

Limits  of  tolerance.  Dial  63:326-9  Oct 
11.   1917 

RG  '17 

Professor  and  the  institution.  Science  n  s 
40:60-2  July  10,   1914 

RG  '10-14 

All  honor  to  Harvard.  Journal  of  Education 
80:435-6  Nov  5,  1914 

RGS  '07-15 

Anderson,  Maxwell 

Blue  pencil.  New  Republic  17:192-4  Dec 
14.  1918 

Anti-climax   in    censorship.    Public    11:172-3 
1908 

Appleton,  Henry 

What  is  freedom?  and  When  am  I  free? 
Being  an  attempt  to  put  liberty  on  a 
rational  basis,  and  wrest  its  keeping 
from  irresponsible  pretenders  in  church 
and  state.  Princeton.  Mass.  Co-opera- 
tive publishing  co.   1878  27p 

TS 

Discussion    of    general    freedom. 

Archer,  William 

Critical   court  of  honor.   Fortnightlv   Re- 
view 79:698-705  April,  1903 
Y 

Asia's   fourth    estate.    Nation   86:460-1    May 

21.    1908 
Y 

Editorial  on  the  Chinese  law  of  press  cen- 
sorship. 

Atkinson,  Wilmer 

Earnest  appeal  to  members  of  the  61st 
Congress  (codifying,  revising  and 
amending  the  postal  laws)  to  safeguard 
the  liberty  of  the  press,  and  to  let  the 
papers  circulate  without  government 
supervision,  espionage  or  interference. 
Philadelphia.  The  author  1910  8p 
TS 

Opposes  bill  to  increase  the  discretionary 
power  of  the  Postmaster  General  over  periodical 
press. 

Barwick,   G.  F. 

Laws  regulating  printing  and  publishing 
in  Spain.  Bibliographical  Society  Trans- 
actions 4:47-55   1896-1898 


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Beard,    Charles   Austin,    1874- 

Univcrsity  and   democracy.   Dial  64:335-7 
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RG  '18 
Benson,  A.  L. 

Press   not   free   to   give   true   information 
to  the  people.    Pearson's   Magazine  28: 
97-106  Dec.  1912 
AMI    '12 
y— Black,  Hugh,   1868- 

\        [Free  speech  v.  censorship.]   Everybody's 
\^^^      Magazine  26:114-16   1912 

Boland,  Harry 

Free    speech    recalled.    Mother    Earth    4: 
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TS 

A    eulogy. 

Bonney,   C.   C. 

Press  and  the  government.  Chicago  Legal 
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Brackenridge,   Hugh   Henry,    1748-1816 
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Brown,  Henry  B. 

Liberty  of  the  press.  American  Law  Re- 
view 34:321-41  May,  1900' 
Y 

An    address    delivered    before    the    New    York 
State    bar    association.       Censures    the    press. 

Browne,   E.    E. 

Free   speech   kin   to   freedom   of   worship. 
La  Follette's  Magazine  12:27  Feb,  1920 
TS 

This    congressman     lauds     free    speech     while 
justifying   existing   abridgements   of  it. 

Burke,  Edmund,   1729-1797 

Speech  on  a  motion  .  .  .  for  leave  to 
bring  in  a  bill  for  explaining  the  powers 
of  juries  in  prosecutions  for  libels.  (In 
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Brown  &  co.   1866 

NY  Y 

Butler,    Nicholas    Murray,    1862- 

Academic  freedom  and  its  meaning.  Ed- 
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RG   '10-14 

Butler,   Noble   C. 

Law  and  public  opinion.  American  Law 
Review   49:374-88    May,    1915 

ILP  '15 

Butte,   George   Charles   Felix,    1877- 

Academic  freedom;  or,  In  the  spirit  of 
1836;  the  Independence  day  address  de- 
livered before  the  student  body  of  the 
University  of  Texas  on  March  2,  1917. 
Austin,   Tex.,   G.    C.   F.    Butte    1917   8p 

uses 

Capen,   Samuel   Paul,    1878- 

Recent    movements    in    college    and    uni- 
versity administration.  U.  S.  Bureau  of 
Education  Bulletin  46:51-60  1916 
RG  '17 

CatteU,  J.   McKeen 

Academic    slavery.     School    and     Society 
6:421-6  Oct  13,  1917 
MEP  '17 


"Censor"  clippings  from  various  newspapers 
relative  to  the  censorship  in  different 
countries;  mounted  and  bound,  n.p. 
1893-1907  2v 

Censorship  of  the  press  in  Germany. 
.Spectator  62:422   1889 

^Chafee,  Zachariah,  jr. 

Free  speech  a  necessity.  Truth  Seeker  46: 
733  Dec  27.  1919 

Its 

Favors  freedom  of  teaching  apparently  upon 
all    subjects.      Reprinted    from    New    York    Sun. 

freedom  of  speech.  New  York,  Harcourt, 
Brace  and  Howe  1920  431p 

Chamberlain,   John   D. 

Freedom  of  speech  in  public  streets,  parks 
and  commons.   Case  and   Comment  22: 
461-6  Nov,  1915 
TS 

Review   of  judicial   decisions. 

Chancellor,   William    Estabrook,    1867- 
Academic  freedom;  discussion  of  the  re- 
port   of    university    professors.    School 
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RG  '16 

Chapman,  A.   B.  Wallis 

Ethics    of   public    meetings.    Westminster 
Review  170:161-70  Aug,  1908 
Y 

Chevaillier,   A.   A. 

Constitutional      liberty.      Arena     1 :432-40 
1890 
Y 

Cheyney,  Edward  Potts,   1861- 

Trustees    and    faculties.    School    and    So- 
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RG  '15 

Coan,  Titus  Munson 

(ed.)  .  .  .  Questions  of  belief.  New  York 
and  London,  G.  P.  Putnam's  sons   1883 
204p 
LC  TS 

Articles  reprinted  from  the  Contemporary 
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Century. 

The  suppression  of  poisonous  opinions,  by  L. 
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Community  center  movement  and  free 
speech.  Current  Opinion  60:420-1  June, 
1916 

RG  '16 

Comstock,  Anthony,    1844-1915 

Frauds  exposed;  or.  How  the  people  are 
deceived  and  robbed,  and  youth  cor- 
rupted; being  a  full  exposure  of  various 
schemes  operated  thru  the  mails,  and 
unearthed  by  the  author  in  a  seven 
years'  service  as  a  special  agent  of  the 
post  office  department  and  secretary 
and  chief  agent  of  the  New  York  society 
for  the  suppression  of  vice.  New  York, 
J.    H.    Brown    [1880]    576p 

LC  NY  TS  Y 

Conway,  Moncure  Daniel,  1832- 
The  theater.  Cincinnati,  O.  1857  29p 

B 


FREE  SPEECH 


73 


Cook,    George   Cram 

Third    American     sex.     Forum    50:445-63 
1913 
Y 

Criticises   noncommittal   attitude   of   university 
teachers,    due   to    fear    of    authorities. 

Cooley,  Thomas   Mclntyre 

Treatise  on  the  constitutional  limitations 
which  rest  upon  the  legislative  power 
of  the  states  of  the  American  union. 
Boston,   Little   1868 

Contains   discussions   of  liberty   of   speech,   re- 
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considered. 
—Same.  6th  ed  Boston,  Little  1890 

Creighton,  James   Edwin,    1861- 

Academic    freedom.    Science    ns    37:450-1 
March   21,    1913 
RG  '10-14 

Cross,   Maurice 

(ed.)  Selections  from  the  Edinburgh  Re- 
view; with  a  preliminary  dissertation 
and  explanatory  notes.  New  York  and 
London,  Longmans,  Green  &  co.  1833 
4v 
B   NY   Y 

Volume   4.      Liberty   of   the  press. 

Crutchfield,   J.    F. 

Defense  of  agitators,  naming  three. 
Truth  Seeker  46:111    Feb   15,   1919 

Names   Jesus,    Robert    Emmet,    Francisco    Fer- 
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Curb  for  the  sensational  press.  Centurv  83: 

631-3    1912 
Y 

Curran,  J.   P. 

On  the  libertv  of  the  press.  (In:  World's 
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De   Fonblanque,  Edward   Harrington 

Political  and  military  episodes  in  the  lat- 
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derived  from  the  life  and  correspon- 
dence of  the  Right  Hon  John  Burgoyne, 
general,  statesman,  dramatist.  New 
York  and  London,  The  Macmillan  co. 
1876  xiii,500p 

LC   Y 

Depew,   Chaimcey  Mitchell,   1834- 

Liberty  of  the  press;  address  before  the 
New  York  State  Press  association.  New 
York,  June  19,  1883.  [New  York  1883] 
20p 

B   NY 

De   Silver,   Albert 

Freedom  of  speech.  Arbitrator  3:1-6  Tan, 
1921 
Historical  and  legal  defense  of  free  speech. 

Devine,   Edward   Thomas,    1867- 

.\cademic   freedom.    Survev   35:561-2    Feb 
5.   1916 
RG  '16 

Dewey,  John,  1859- 

Case  of  the  professor  and  the  public  in- 
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MEP  '17 


Dicey,  Albert  Vemi 

Introduction  to  the  study  of  the  law  of 
the  constitution.  8th  ed  New  York,  Mac- 
millan  CO.    1915   557p 

Chapters    6    and    7    give    English    law    of    free- 
dom  of  speech  and  assembly. 

Dickinson,   Thomas    H. 

The  insurgent  theatre.  New  York, 
Huebsch    1917  250p 

Chapter  6,  Theatre  and  the  law. 

Dillard,  James  Hardy 

History  and  free  speech.  Public  22:236-7 
March  8,  1919 

Dissertation  upon  the  constitutional  free- 
dom of  the  press  in  the  United  States; 
by  an  impartial  citizen.  Boston  1801 
54p 

HCL 

Don't  suppress  free  speech.  Brooklyn  Eagle 

April   10,    1919 
TS 

Long    editorial    against    suppressive    ordinance. 

Draper,   John   William,    1811-1882 

Thoughts    on    the    future    civil    policy    of 

America.  New  York,  Harper  &  brothers 

1865  vii,[9]-325p 
TS 

Chapter    3.      On   the   political    force   of   ideas; 

also   as  to   literary  and   art  censorship,   see  P284 

et   seq. 
— Same.     4th     ed     New     York,     Harper     & 

brothers    1871    vii,[9]-325p 
LC 

Dubrowitz,    H, 

Intolerance.  Crucible  no.  38,  Dec  22,  1917 

Duchesne   and    Rampolla.    Independent    71: 

832-3  Oct  12,  1911 
RG  '10-14 

Duffield,  George  Howard,  1854- 
Tolerant  spirit  of  the  American  colonists; 
an  address  delivered  before  the  Society 
of   colonial   wars   in   the   state   of   New 
York.    [New   York]    1915    19p 

LC 

Duguit,   Leon,   1859- 

Law  in  the  modern  state;  tr.  by  Frida  and 
Harold  Laski.  New  York,  Huebsch  1919 
247p 

Duniway,    Clyde    Augustus,    1866- 

Dcvelopmcnt  of  freedom  of  the  press  in 
Massachusetts.  New  York  and  London, 
Longmans,  Green  &  co.  1906  xv,202p 

B  LC  NY  TS  Y 

Restrictions  upon  the  freedom  of  the 
press  in  Massachusetts;  revised  and 
published  as  The  development  of  free- 
dom of  the  press  in  Massachusetts. 
New  York  and  London,  Longmans, 
Green  &  co.  1906  xv,202p 

Edgerton,  Alice 

Lost   art    of   censorship.    Freeman    2:369- 
70  Dec  29,  1920 
TS 

Ironical     glorification    of    past     arbitrary    and 
brutal    suppression    of    heretics. 


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LC  TS 

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Free   speech   the   safety  valve.   Pearson's 
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TS 

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Is  free  speech   dangerous?    Century   100: 
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TS 
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March  29,  1919 
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Freedom  of  speech  and  political   issues   at 
western      state      universities.      Current 
Opinion  58:419-20  June,   1915 
RG  '15 
Freedom  of  the  press.  Outlook  102:831  Dec 

21,    1912 
RG  '10-14 
Freedom  of  the  press.  Survey  24:365-8  June 

4.   1910 
RG  '10-14 
Y 
Freedom    of    the    press    in    France.    Nation 

108:305-6  Feb  22,   1919 
French   declaration    of    the    rights    of   man. 
(In:  Blind,  M.  Madam  Roland.  Boston, 
Little,   Brown   &  co.   1886) 
Freund,   Ernst 

Freedom   of  speech  and  press.   New   Re- 
public   25:344-6    Feb    16,    1921  .  . 

Finely  reasoned  criticism  of  the  Juridical 
status,  and  inspired  by  Prof.  Zachanah  Chaf ee  8 
book   on   the   subject. 


FREE  SPEECH 


75 


Friends,  Society  of 

Theatrical  amusements  and  horse-racing. 
[Address]   Philadelphia  1873  12p 
B 

Gagging   the   press  in   China.    Literary   Di- 
gest 48:152  Jan  24.   1914 
RG  '10-14 

Gamett,  Edward 

Censorship  of  public  opinion.  Fortnightly- 
Review  92:137-48  1909 
Y 

Germans  and  freedom   of  thought.   Specta- 
tor 80:157-9  1898 
Y 

Gildersleeve,   Virginia    Crocheron,    1877- 
Government  regulation  of  the  Elizabethan 
drama  .  .  .  New  York,   [Columbia  uni- 
versity press]    1908   vii,259p 
Y 

Gillette,  John  Morris,   1866- 

Academic    freedom.    School    and    Society 
2:873-9  Dec  18,  1916 
RG  '16 

Grannan,  J.  C. 

Warning  against  fraud  and  valuable  in- 
formation. Akron,  O.   1891 

Forgery,   obscene   literature,   meaning   of   legal 
terms,   swindling  games   and  tricks,   etc. 

Grasty,   Charles   H. 

Reasonable  restriction  upon  freedom  of 
the  press.  American  Sociological  So- 
ciety 9:117-32  Dec,   1914 

AMI    '15 

A  breezy  editor's  general  discussion  that  sheds 
little   light   on   our   problem. 

Greeson,  W.  G, 
Academic    freedom.    Scientific    American 
118:55  Jan   12,  1918 
RG  '18 

Grimke,  Frederick 

Considerations     upon     the     nature     and 
tendency    of    free    institutions.    Cincin- 
nati, O.,  H.  W.-  Derby  &  co.  1848 
HCL 

Hadley,  Arthur  Twining,  1856- 

Academic  freedom  in  theory  and  in  prac- 
tice.  Atlantic   Monthly  91:152-60;   334-4 
1903 
Y 

Government  by  public  opinion.  University 
Chronicle  4:65-79  1901 


Relations   between    freedom   and    respon- 
sibility in   the  evolution  of  democratic 
government.  New  York,  Charles  Scrib- 
ner's  sons   1903  175p 
HCL  NY 

General    discussion    of   liberty,   with   some   ref- 
erence   to    academic   freedom    and   toleration. 

Hale,  Benjamin 

Liberty  and  law;  a  lecture  delivered  be- 
fore the  Young  Men's  Christian  Asso- 
ciation, in  Geneva,  New  York,  Novem- 
ber 8,  1837  .  .  .  Geneva,  Ira  Merrell 
1838  24p 

NY 


[Hallinan,  Charles  T.] 

Useful  crank  is  buying  books.  Evening 
Post   (Chicago)    Oct  6,    1912 

An  editorial  appreciation  of  Theodore  Schroed- 
er   as   advocate   of   free   speech. 

Hapgood,  Hutchins 

Cold  enthusiast.  Hillacre,  Riverside,  Conn. 
Priv.   printed   1913    lOp 

Reprinted  for  private  distribution  by  permis- 
sion of  the  Globe,  October  is,  igi2.  Apprecia- 
tion of  Theodore  Schroeder,  secretary  of  the 
Free    speech    league. 

Harding,  T.    Siyan      -^^  ?  ^   ^  ^  -  ^    - 

Conventional  virtue's  devious  path.  Open 
Court    34:371-81    June,    1920 

Harvey,  Alexander 

How  to  abridge  freedom  of  speech.  The 
Bang  V   12  no   13,  June   18,   1917 

This  whole  issue  is  devoted  to  free  speech, 
lost   of   it   short   paragraphs   without    title. 

The   Bang.   v9  no.       1916 

Contains     clever     comments     on      Schroeder's 
"Free    speech    for    radicals." 
Same.  vl2  no  7,   May  7,   1917 

The   whole   number   devoted  to   free   speech. 

Harvey,   George    Brinton   McClellan,    1864- 
Power  of  tolerance,  and   other  speeches. 
New     York     and     London,     Harper     & 
brothers    1911    vii,325p 
LC   TS 

Chapter  i.  The  power  of  tolerance.  General 
discussion. 

Has  a  board  of  censors  the  final  decision 
as  to  the  propriety  of  a  motion  picture 
film?  [Note  to  Franklin  film  manu- 
facturing corporation,  District  reports 
(Pa.)  25:219]  University  of  Pennsyl- 
vania  Law  Review  64:731-4  May,   1916 

ILP   '16 

Hearst  should  be  expatriated.  Goodwin's 
Weekly   Dec   28,   1918  pl-2 

A  violent  attack  on  the  publications  controled 
by  William  Randolph  Hearst,  even  repeating 
an  absurd  charge  that  he  inspired  the  assassin 
of  President  McKinley  and  justifies  the  prohibi- 
tion of  Hearst  publications  from  Nevada  for 
their    pro-german    tendencies. 

Hemenway,  Henry  B, 

Report    of   the    committee    on    publishing 

details  of  suicides  in   the  public  press. 

Easton,     Pa.,     American     academy     of 

medicine   12:253-63   Oct,   1911    (Bulletin 

no.  5,  whole  no.  125) 
TS 

Approaches  the  problem  of  promoting  crime 
by  newspaper  reports  of  crime,  a  psychologic 
concept  that  is  beginning  to  be  questioned  by 
psychologists. 

[Hertz,  B.   R.] 

American  freedom.  International  5:  .\pril,- 
1912 
TS 

HUl,   Mabel 

(conip.)  Liberty  documents,  with  con- 
temporary exposition  and  critical  com- 
ments drawn  from  various  writers; 
New  York  and  London.  Longmans, 
Green  &  co.  1901  xxviii,458p 

LC  NY  Y  ... 

Pages  126;  168;  169;  207;  and  261  contain 
free    speech    matter. 


76 


niBLIOGRAPHY 


Hoar,  George  Frisbie,  1826-1904 

Free  speech  and  constitutional  liberty; 
extract  from  an  address  at  Boston,  Oct. 
4,  19U1.  (In  Gilder:  The  American  idea. 
p295-8  New  York,  Dodd,  Mead  &  co. 
1902) 

B 

Horner,  J.   M. 

Modern  emigrant;  or,  Lover  of  liberty; 
being  a  discourse  delivered  in  New 
York  city.  New  York,  W.  Mitchell  1832 
18p 

NY 

House,  Frederick  B. 

Application  of  the  law  of  disorderly  con- 
duct to  illegal  public  speaking,  and  the 
distribution  of  improper  printed  matter. 
New  York,  Frederick  B.  House,  City 
magistrate  1917  16p 

PAIS  '18 

Howard,  L.  C,  ed. 

Bits  of  quaintness  from  the  doctrine  of 
libels.  Law  Notes  9:212  Feb,  1906 

Historical.  Excerpt  from  anonymous  Eng- 
lish   book    of    the    eighteenth    century. 

Howe,  Frederic  Clemson,  1867- 

Constitution  and  public  opinion.  Proceed- 
ings of  the  Academy  of  Political  Science 
5:7-19  Oct,  1914 
RGS  '07-15 

Hume,  David,  1711-1776 

Of  the  liberty  of  the  press.  (In  his: 
Philosophical  works.  3:6-10)  Boston, 
Little,  Brown  &  co.   1854 

NY 

Hunt,  Albert  F. 

Press    censorship.    Newburvport    (Mass.) 
Item  Sept  4,   1897 
TS 

Discussion  provoked  arrest  of  editor  for  sell- 
ing   "Almost    Fourteen." 

Index  crosses  the  Atlantic.  Independent  65: 

724-6  1908 
Y 

Robert    Ingersolls    conservatism.     Freeman 
2:498  Feb  2,  1921 

Quotes  letter  of  Robert  G.  Ingersoll  and  in- 
terprets his  conservatism  on  free  speech  in 
terms    of  his    emotional   conflict. 

International  league  of  press  clubs 

.  .  .  Constitution  and  by-laws  with  ab- 
stract of  proceedings  of  the  first  annual 
convention  held  in  San  Francisco,  Cal., 
January  14,  15  and  19,  1892.  [New  York, 
The  James  Kempster  printing  co.  1892] 
35p 
LC 

Jephson,  Henry  Lorenzo 

The  platform:  its  rise  and  progress.  New 
York  and  London,  The  Macmillan  co. 
1892  2v 
LC  TS 

Valuable  historical  treatise.  Chap.  q.  Legal 
position  of  the  platform,  P167-86;  chap.  7. 
First  suppression  of  the  platform,  P24i-q2;  chap. 
9.  Second  suppression  of  the  platform.  P350-.120: 
chap.  II.  Third  suppression  of  the  platform,  P463- 
S28:  chap.  14.  Roman  Catholic  emancipation 
agitation,    etc. 


Judge  Field's  opinion  in  the  Jackson  case; 
Supreme  court  of  the  United  States  .  .  . 
October  term,  1877.  Truth  Seeker  6:534 
August  24,   1878 
TS 

Same  Ex  parte  Jackson,  U.S.  Reports  96:727. 
Deals  with  constitutional  power  for  postal  cen- 
sorship. 

Kannengieser,    A. 

Universites  allemandes  contre  I'empereur; 
I'afifaire   Motnmsen-Spahn.    Correspond- 
ent 206:42-70  1902 
Kelly,    H[arry] 
An  anthology  of  free  press.  Mother  Earth 
4:249-50  Oct,   1909 
TS 

Favorable   review   of  T.    Schroedcr's   book. 

Kennedy,  Crammond,  1842- 

Liberty  of  the  press:  its  uses  and  abuses. 
Washington    1887  23p 
NY 
Kerr,   Charles 

Shall  we  have  a  free  press?  Outlook  121: 
18-19  Jan    1,   1919 
King,  John 
Publishing  false  news.  Green  Bag  20:611- 
19  Dec.  1908 
Kittle,  William 

Making  of  public   opinion.   Arena  41:433- 
50   1909 
Y 
Lacombe,    H.   de 

Liberte    de   I'enseignement   en    1899.    Cor- 
respondent  186:3-52   1899 
La  Follette,   Robert  M. 

People  demand  a  free  press.  La  Follette's 
Magazine  12:161  Nov.  1920 
TS 
Larned,  Josephus  Nelson,  1836-1913 

History  for  ready  reference  from  the  best 
historians,  biographers  and  specialists. 
Springfield,  Mass.,  C.  A.  Nichols  co. 
1894  5v 

Volume  4:2600-2.  End  of  newspaper  mon- 
opoly in  France.  Zenger's  trial  in  New  York. 
Freedom  of  parliamentary  reporting  won  in 
England.  Trial  of  Hone.  Extinction  of  taxes 
on  newspapers  in  England.  Surviving  press 
censorship    in    Germany. 

[Law  of  libel;  review  of  The  law  of  libel; 
by  Francis  Ludlow  Holt.l  American 
Quarterly  Review  5:71-85   1829 

Y 

LefTmann,    Henry,    1847- 

Academic     freedom.     Science     ns     37:602 

April   18,   1913 
RG   '10-14 
Legal    and    fiscal    trammels    of    the    press. 

Westminster   Review   18:474-93   1833 
NY 
Legal  limitations  upon  the  use  of  language. 

Public   11:147-9   1908 
Liberty  of  opinion  denied.  Independent  55: 

2940-1   Dec  10,  1903 

Good   historical   essay. 

Liberty  of  the  press  in  France.  Solicitor's 
Journal  and  Reporter  13:15-53;  71-2 
Nov  21.  28,  1868 


FREE  SPEECH 


77 


Limitations    on    the   freedom   of    the   press. 
[Editorial]  Green  Bag  24:534  Nov,  1912 
ILP   '12 
Lippman,  Walter 

Basic  problem  of  modern  democracy.  At- 
lantic  Monthly   125:616-27   Nov,    1919 

A  general  discussion  with  the  unusual  merit 
of  using  the  psychologic  approach  to  an  under- 
standing   of    the    arguments    on    this    subject. 

Literary  censorship.  Dial  48:135-7  March  1, 

1910 
RG  '10-14 
L[ittell],    P[hilip] 

Books    and    things.    New    Republic    11:56 

May    12,    1917 

Lloyd,   Henry    Demarest,    1847-1903 

Free  speech  and  assemblage.  (In  his:   H. 

D.    Mazzini    and    other    essays.    pl25-46 

New   York   1910) 
NY 

Lodian,  L. 

"Blacked  out;"  what  the  Russian  censor 
did  to  the  Photograjjhic  Times-Bulletin. 
Photographic  Times-Bulletin  36:29-30 
1904 

Long,   Joseph   R. 

Freedom  of  the  press.  Virginia  Law  Re- 
view 5:225  1918 

Loomis,  William  Warner,  1876-,  and  Nick- 
less,  Vernon 

What  the  law  says;  a  digest  of  the  Illinois 
laws  and  court  decisions  relating  to  the 
printing  of  notices,  ordinances,  reports, 
annual  statements  and  other  legal  pub- 
lications, state  printing  and  binding, 
libel  and  contempt.  La  Grange,  111., 
Citizen  publishing  co.  1915  81p 
LC 

Lovell,  James 

Copy  of  the  letter  of  July  4,  1805,  to  the 
president  of  the  United  States,  sup- 
posed by  the  writer,  to  be  fitted,  special- 
ly, for  the  eye  and  courage  of  the 
"Young  Federal  Republican  of  Boston," 
.  .  .  Boston,  A.  Newell  [1805]  8p 
NY 

Lover   of  his   country,   pseud. 

Liberty  and  property;  or.  The  beauty  of 
Maryland  displayed;  being  a  brief  and 
candid  search  and  inquiry  into  her 
charter,  fundamental  laws  and  consti- 
tution. [New  York  1891]  29p 
B 

Lowell,  Abbott  Lawrence,   1856- 

Public  opinion  and  popular  government. 
New  York.  Longmans,  Green  &  co. 
1913  xiv,415p  / 

NY 

McCullagh,  Francis  1 

''Freedom"   in   Portugal.   Living  .Age  268:  \ 

629-31   March   11,   1911  \ 

Y  ^- 

McMaster,  John  Bach,  and  Stone,  F.  D.,  ed. 
Pennsvlvania  and  the  federal  convention. 
1787-1788.  [Lancaster,  Penn.]  Hist.  Soc. 
of    Penn.    1888   803p 


McVicker,  James  Hubert,   1822-1896 
The    press,    the    pulpit   and    the    stage;    a 
lecture  delivered  at  Central  music  hall, 
Chicago,    November   28,    1882.    Chicago, 
Western  news  co.   1883  79p 

LC   Y 

Maine.  Statutes 

Report  and  resolves  relating  to  the  right 
of  petition.  (22d  legislature.  Senate 
Doc.  no.  46)  W.  R.  Smith  &  co. 
[1842?]   9p 

NY 

Mass  meeting  of  protest  against  the  sup- 
pression of  truth  about  the  Philippines, 
Faneuil  Hall,  March  19,  [1903].  Boston 
1903  60p 

HCL 

Mavity,  Nancy  Barr 

Conditions  of  tolerance.  Unpopular  Re- 
view 10:94-105  July,  1918 

RG  '18 

May,   Thomas   Erskine,    1815-1886 

Constitutional  history  of  England,  1760- 
1860,  with  supp.  chap.,  1861-71.  New 
York,   Doran   1910  2v 

Mayer,  Brantz 

Calvert  and  Penn,  or  the  growth  of  civil 
and  religious  liberty  in  America.  [Lan- 
caster, Penn.]  Hist.  Soc.  of  Penn.  1852 
50p 

Mead,  Leon,  and  Gilbert,  F.  Newell 

Manual  of  forensic  quotations;  introduc- 
tion by  John  W.  Griggs.  New  York,  J. 
F.  Taylor  &  co.  1903  xiv,207p 

TS 

Contains    quotations    on    libel,    pi 30;     Liberty 
of   the   press,    pi58-6o. 

Mecklin,  John   Moflfatt,    1871- 
Acadeinic  freedom  and  status.  School  and 
Society  3:624-30  April  29,   1916 
RG  '16 
Meiklejohn,  Alexander 

Freedotii  of  the  college.  .Atlantic  Monthly 
121:83-9    Tan,    1918 
RG  '18 

Menace  to  free  discussion.  Dial  26:325-7 
1899 

Y 

Merrill,   Fred  W. 

Right  of  petition,  1654:  a  paper  read  be- 
fore the  Amesbury  improvement  his- 
torical association  on  Thursday,  April 
5,  1900.  Reprinted  from  the  Hamptons 
Union.  Amesbury,  Mass.  Amesbury  im- 
provement historical  association  1900 
7p 
-NY  , 

Mill,  John  Stuart,  1806-1873 

On    liberty.    Boston,    Ticknor    &    Fields 

1863  223p 
Y 
—Same.  2d  ed  Boston.   [Ticknor  &  Fields] 

1863  223p 
Y 
— Same;    [and]    the   Subjection   of   women. 

New  York.  Henry  Holt  &  co.   1874 
Y 


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Areopagitica;  a  defence  of  the  liberty  of 
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LC  NY 

Missouri.   Laws,   statutes,  etc. 

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LC 

Moore,   George 

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Pp.     106-27    contains    some    defense    of    book 
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Moore,  George  H. 

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TS 

Includes     statutes     of     1648     against     heresy, 
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Moore,  John  Weeks,  1807-1889 

(comp.)  Moore's  historical,  biographical, 
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Moorfield     Storey    on    free     speech     [and] 
Freedom  of  speech.  Public  11:25-6  1908 

Morris,  Martin  Ferdinand 

History  of  the  development  of  constitu- 
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Do  you  want  free  speech?  Home,  Wash- 
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General  discussion  opposing  sex-censorship 
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Free    speech    and    its   enemies.    Case    and 
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TS 

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Monumental     defence     of     free     speech. 
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TS 

Reprinted   from   the   Public,   August    26,    1905- 
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Municipal  art  society  of  Baltimore 

Addresses  delivered  on  the  occasion  of  the 
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TS 

National  defense  association 

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TS 

Opposes  postal  sex-censorship. 

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New    Jersey's    journalistic    perils.    Literary 

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Nicholson,  Watson 

Struggle    for    a    free    stage    in    London. 
Boston     and     New     York,     Houghton, 
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The     earliest     American     printing    press. 
Truth  Seeker  47:650  Oct  9,   1920 
TS 

In   1536  first  press  established  in  Mexico  City. 
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ILP  '17 


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Silencing    the    press.    Nation    75:4   Jan    1, 

1903 
Ogg,  Frederic  Austin 
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New    York,    The    Macmillan    co.    1912 

384p 

Page  38  quotes  declaration  of  French  revolu- 
tionists as  to  free  speech.  Page  50  quotes 
Napoleon  on  free  speech  against  freedom  of 
press. 

Ohio.   Laws,   statutes,   etc. 

Laws  of  public  printing;  a  compilation  of 
the  statutes  of  the  state  of  Ohio  per- 
taining to  public  printing;  how  and 
when  legal  advertisements  shall  be  pub- 
lished; how  measured  and  the  rates 
therefor.  Miscellaneous  laws  relating  to 
printing  and  legal  publishing;  general 
rules  for  legal  advertising.  Columbus, 
O.,  The  F.  J.  Heer  printing  co.  [1911?] 
115p 
Laws  relating  to  public  printing;  libel 
postal  laws,  etc.  Columbus,  O.,  F.  J. 
Heer    1900   72p 

LC 

Old  freedoms  discussed  by  twentieth  cen- 
tury sociologists.  Survey  33:406-12  Jan 
9.   1915 

Oration  on  the  beauties  of  liberty;  or.  The 
essential  right  of  the  Americans,  deliv- 
ered ...  in  Boston  upon  the  annual 
Thanksgiving,  Dec  3d,  1772  .  .  .  With 
some  strictures  on  the  eternal  right  of 
mankind,  liberty  of  conscience,  and  re- 
marks on  the  rights  and  liberties  of  the 
Americans  ...  By  a  British  Bostonian. 
3d  ed  Boston,  E.  Russell  1773 

JCB 

People  who  have  eaten  books.  Scientific 
American  94:267  March  31,   1906 

Phelps,  Edward  Bunnell 

Neurotic  books  and  newspapers  as  factors 
in  the  mortality  of  suicide  and  crime. 
Easton,  Pa.,  Bulletin  of  the  American 
academy  of  medicine  12:264-306  Oct, 
1911 

TS 

Plato,  430P-347  B.C. 
Apologia     Socratis.     Chicago,     American 
book  CO.   1912 

Plea  for  publicity.  Spectator  103:265-6 
August  21,  1909 

RGS  '07-15 

Pound,  Roscoe 

Interests  of  personality.  Harvard  Law  Re- 
view 28:343-65,  445-56  Feb.   Mar,   1915 

Preliminary  report  on  academic  freedom 
and  academic  tenure.  American  Eco- 
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Same.  School  and  Society  1:565-9  April 
17.    1915 

RG'15 

Press  and  crime.  Easton,  Pa.  Bulletin  of  the 
American  Academy  of  Medicine  12:253- 
316  Oct.  1911 

Contains  report  of  Committee  on  publishing 
details  of  suicides  in  the  public  press  and  other 
related  papers. 


Press  and  public  documents.  Law  Times 
125:353  Aug  8,  1908 

Press  and  the  law.  Law  Journal  43:655-6 
Oct  31.  1908 

Press  censorship.   Public   11:292-3   1908 

Press  censorship  in  France.  Nation  108:221 
Feb  8,  1919 

Press    censorship    in    Russia.    Independent 

55:122  Jan   15,   1903 
Y 

Contains  quotations  from  a  confidential  circu- 
lar  on   Russian   press   restrictions. 

Pritchett,  Henry 

Reasonable  restrictions  upon  the  schol- 
ar's freedom.  American  Sociological 
Society  9:150-68  Dec,   1914 

TS 

Concludes  that  "A  courageous  man  of  sound 
judgement  can  say  many  things  which  the  bold 
man  who  lacks  judgment  cannot,"  but  does  not 
help    us    to    more    intellectual    hospitality. 

Proscopos,  pseud. 

Metternichs-old  and  new.  Nation  109:35 
July   12,   1919 

Pybum,  George 

Conspiracy  against  free   speech   and   free 

press.  New  York,  E.  C.  Walker  for  the 

author   1902  32p 
LC  NY  TS 
Rae,  WUliam  Eraser,   1835-1905 

Wilkes,    Sheridan,    Fox;    the    opposition 

under    George    the    Third.    New    York, 

D.  Appleton  &  co.  1874  462p 
TS 

Has  scattered  material  on  history  of  free 
speech   controversy. 

Reed,  Ralph 

Crime    and    the    press.    Lancet-clinic    106: 
460-2  Nov  4,  1911 
TS 

Reply  to  Argument  for  freedom,  Bulletin  of 
the    American    academy    of    medicine,    October, 

Critical  review  of  Hemenway  and  others,  Re- 
port of  the  committee  on  publishing  the  details 
of    suicides    in    public    press. 

Reedy.   William   Marion 

Crime  against  free  speech.  [Editorial]  St. 
Louis  Mirror  June   10,   1909 
TS 

Report  of  the  committee  on  academic  free- 
dom and  academic  tenure.  .American 
Economic  Review  6:sup230-46  March, 
1916 

RG  '16 

Report  of  the  committee  on  academic  free- 
dom. School  Review  24:222-4  March, 
1916 

RG  '16 

Restrictions  on  the  freedom  of  the  press. 
Harvard    Law    Review    16:55    1902 

Reynolds,  Ernest  Shaw 

Another  phase  of  academic  freedom.  Sci- 
ence ns  46:184-5  Aug  24,  1917 
RG  '17 


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TS 

ISO   items.     Includes  some   items  here  omitted 
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TS 

Discusses    legal    aspect    in    thoro    conventional 
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Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,   1864- 

Concerning   free    speech   anthology.    New 

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Conflict  between  religious  morals  and 
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TS 

Constitutional  free  speech  defined  and  de- 
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Argument    in    case    of    People    of    Connecticut 
V.    M.    X.    Mockus. 

Contents:  Statement  of  case;  Importance;  Rea- 
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Origin,  meaning  and  scope  of  blasphemy  laws 
Prosecutions  for  criticism  against  religion,  1600 
1818;  Review  of  blasphemy  prosecutions;  Psy 
chology  of  democracy,  fear  and  free  speech; 
Overt  act  and  actual  injury  v.  evil  phychologic 
tendency;  Roger  Williams;  James  Madison, 
Thomas  Jefferson;  Christianity  and  the  law; 
Supreme  court  decision  of  Judge  P.  L.  Persons 
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constitution  had  abrogated  common  law  crime  of 
blasphemy. 

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FREE  SPEECH 


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TS 

"Due  process  of  law"  in  relation  to  statu- 
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fences, giving  much  needed  enlighten- 
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New  York,  Free  speech  league  1908 
74p 
TS 

Edward   Bond   Foote;   biographical   notes 
and     appreciatives.     New     York,     Free 
speech   league    1913   85p 
TS 

Appreciation    of   Dr    Footc    as    friend    of    free 
speech   and  founder  of  Free   Speech   League. 

Erskine  on  the  limits  of  toleration.  Sec- 
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TS 
•  For  free  speech  is   this  visitor.    Madison 
Democrat  88:1   Julv  30,   1912 
TS 

(comp.)      Free     press      anthology.      New 
York,    Free    speech    league    and    Truth 
Seeker  publishing  co.   1909  267p 
TS 

Bibliography^  of   recent   articles   p264-7.      Book 
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Government  by  spies.  Twentieth  Century 
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TS 
■•^Historical    interpretation     of    unabridged 
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Free   speech   league    [19111    36p 
TS 

Intellectual  hospitalitv.  Truth  Seeker  38: 
281   May  6,   1911 
TS 

Liberty    includes    right    to   use   scurrilous   lan- 
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Intellectual  libertv  and  literary  stvle. 
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Judicial  destruction  of  freedom  of  the 
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Liberal       opponents      and      conservative 
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5:96-111   May,   1910 
TS 

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12p 
TS 

Meaning    of    free    speech    (for    pacifists'). 
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16p 
TS 

Psvchology,   democracy  and   free   speech. 
Medico-legal  Journal  34:1-6  July,   1917 
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Scientific    aspect    of    due    process    of    law 
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TS 

When  speech  is  free.  Call  Magazine  sec 
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For  description  list  of  this  author  see: 
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Schuyler,  Livingston  Rowe,  1868- 
Libcrty  of  the  press  in  the  American  col- 
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B   LC  TS   Y 

Bibliography,  p79-8i.  Treatment  historical. 
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Book    and    the    revolution.    Outlook    87: 
420-30  Oct  26,   1907 
Y 

Sedgwick,  William  Thompson,   1855- 

Modern  subjection  of  science  and  educa- 
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1902 

Y 

Seligman,    Edwin    Robert   Anderson,    1S61- 
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Sept,   1915 

RG  '15 

Severance,    Channing 

Fear  not  free  speech.  Truth  Seeker  47: 
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TS 

Shaw,  George  Bernard,  and  Corbin,  John 
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Shipler,  Guy  Emery 

Freedom    of   press   v.    freedom    of   pulpit. 
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RG  '15 

Slocum,  William  Frederick,   1851- 

Nation's  guarantee  of  personal  rights. 
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NY 

General    discussion    of    liberty,    with    scattered 
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— and  others 

Academic  freedom  and  tenure  of  oflFice. 
Educational  Review  53:416-24  April, 
1917 

RG  '17 

Smith,  Asa   Dodge,    18(14-1877 

Liberty  as  related  to  law;  a  baccalaureate 
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RGS  '07-15 

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LC  TS 

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Blow    at    freedom    of    the    press.    North 
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Villard,   Oswald  Garrison,    1872- 
Academic  freedom;  changes  in  the  status 
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RG  '16 

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Constitutional  provisions  guaranteeing 
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Good   review,   from   the  standpoint   of  judicial 
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Why  Professor  Carver  was  ousted  from 
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TS 

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Examination  of  the  law  of  personal  rights, 
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LC  TS 

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Press  and  public  opinion.  American  Polit- 
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1913 
RGS   '07-15 
Williams,  Walter 

International  free  press.  Public  20:1011-12 
1917 

Wilmer,   Lambert  A.,   d.    1863 

Our  press  gang;  or,  A  complete  exposition 
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LC   NY 

Wilson,  Woodrow 

Let    fools    talk;    President    tells    French 
Academy    freedom    of    speech    by    such 
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TS 

Report    of    President    Wilson's    Paris    speech. 

Winthrop,  John,   1587-1649 

"Little  subjects"  on  liberty,  from  the 
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16p 

HCL 


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Indictment    against    the    bill-board.    Out- 
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Justifies  a  judicial  decision  enjoyning  a  bill- 
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Controversy  at  Colorado  college.   Nation 
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RG  '17 

Woods,   Charles   A. 

Public  discussion.  South  Atlantic  Quar- 
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Woodward,  P.  H. 

Guarding  the  mails;  or,  the  secret  service 
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Wortman,  Tunis,  d.  1822 

Treatise  concerning  political  enquiry,  and 
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Printed  by  G.  Forman  for  the  author 
1800  xii,[13]-296p 

LC  NY  TS 

Author  was  follower  of  Jefferson.  Fine  gen- 
eral appeal  for  freedom.  For  adverse  criticism 
see  Monthly  Anthology  3:S44.  October,  1806. 
Wortman's  treatise  was  written  before  the  law 
was  •  established  that  truth  with  good  motives 
and  for  justifiable  ends   is   not  punishable. 

Y.,   H. 

The   press.   Portfolio   5:522-38   1811 

Yarmolinsky,  A. 

Censorship  in  Russia:  a  historical  study. 
Russian    Review   3:93-103   July,    1917 

Young,   Allyn   Abbott,   and   others 

Report  of  the  committee  on  academic 
freedom  and  academic  tenure  of  the 
American  association  of  university  pro- 
fessors. School  and  Society  7:511-20 
May  4,  1918 
RG  '18 


Part  III     Alien  and  Sedition  Laws  of    1  798 


Addison,  Alexander,   1759-1807 

Analysis  of  the  report  of  the  committee 
of  the  Virginia  assembly,  on  the  pro- 
ceedings of  sundry  of  the  other  states 
in  answer  to  their  resolutions.  Phila- 
delphia,  Z.   Poulson,   jr.    1800   54p 

LC  Y 

Liberty  of  speech  and  of  the  press;  a 
charge  to  the  grand  juries  of  the  county 
courts  of  the  Fifth  circuit  of  the  state 
of  Pennsylvania.  Albany,  N.Y.,  L. 
Andrews    n.d.    16p 

LC 

ist    edition,    1798. 


Address  of  the  minority  in  the  Virginia 
legislature  to  the  people  of  that  state; 
containing  a  vindication  of  the  consti- 
tutionality of  the  Alien  and  sedition 
laws.  [n.p.  1799?]  16p 

LC 

Upholds  Alien  and  sedition  law. 

Address  to  the  people  of  Virginia,  re- 
specting the  Alien  and  sedition  laws. 
By  a  citizen  of  this  state.  Richmond. 
Va.  A.  Davis  1798  63p 

Agricola,  pseud. 

The  Virginia   doctrines,   not  nullification. 
Richmond,  Va.,  S.  Shepherd  &  co.  1832 
52p 
NY  LC 


84 


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TS 

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LC 

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LC 

Cooper,   Thomas,    1759-1840 

Account  of  the  trial  of  Thomas  Cooper 
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B  LC  NY 

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LC  NY  Y 

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B   NY 

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NY  TS 

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LC 

Elliot,  James   B.?   [Historicus,  pseud.] 
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TS 

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TS 

Facts  for  the  present  crisis,  containing: 
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on  the  Alien  and  sedition  laws.  New 
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Louisiana   Courier    1855   50p 

LC 

Freeman,   Edward    A.,    1823-1892 

Virginia  resolutions  of  1798;  a  portion 
of  Madison's  report  thereon:  the  first 
of  the  Kentucky  resolutions  of  1798, 
drawn  by  Thomas  Jeflfcrson;  the  opin- 
ion of  the  Court  of  appeals  of  \^irginia 
in  the  case  Hunter  v.  Martin;  and  the 
address  of  Edward  A.  Freeman,  to  the 
voters  of  the  ninth  congressional  dis- 
trict of  Virginia.  Alexandria,  Va.,  E. 
F.  Tatsapaugh,  printer  1851   lip 

LC 

Hart.  Albert  Bushnell,  1854- 

(ed.)  .  .  .  The  Virginia  and  Kentucky 
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other  acts;  1798-1799.  New  York,  .\. 
Lovell  &  CO,   1894  26p 

LC 

Hill,  Frederick  Trevor,   1866- 

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TS  Y 


FREE  SPEECH 


85 


[Law  of  libel;  review  of  A  treatise  on  the 
law  of  libel  and  the  liberty  of  the 
press  ...  by  Thomas  Cooper;  and  of 
The  people  v.  Croswcll.  Johnson's  Re- 
ports 8:337]  Southern  Quarterly  Re- 
view  12:236-68   1847 

Y 

Liberty  of  the  press;  sedition  law  of  1798. 
Southern  Review  1829 

Livingston.   Edward,   1764-1836 

Discourso  contra  la  ley  de  expulsion  de 
extranjcros,  dada  en  los  Estados-Uni- 
dos;  acompanado  de  un  prologo  y  de 
un  commentario  del  traductor  [Luis  G. 
de  la  Sierra].  Mexico  1873  31p 

B 

Sedition  law.  (In:  Miller,  M.  M.,  ed. 
Great  debates  in  America.  New  York, 
Current  literature  publishing  co.  14v) 
Speech  of  Edward  Livingston,  esq.  on  the 
third  reading  of  the  Alien  bill.  Phila- 
delphia, Printed  by  James  Carey  [1798?] 
16p 

LC 

Nicholas,    George 

Letter  of  George  Nicholas,  of  Kentucky, 
to  his  friend  in  Virginia;  justifying  the 
conduct  of  the  citizens  of  Kentucky,  as 
to  some  of  the  late  measures  of  the 
general  government;  and  correcting 
certain  false  statements,  which  have 
been  made  in  the  dififercnt  states,  of 
the  views  and  actions  of  the  people  of 
Kentucky.  Lexington,  Va.  Printed; 
Philadelphia,  Reprinted  by  J.  Carey 
1799   39p 

LC  NY  Y 

Deals  with  Alien  and  sedition  law. 

Observations  on  A  letter  from  George 
Nicholas,  of  Kentucky,  to  his  friend  in 
Virginia;  in  which,  some  of  the  errors, 
misstatements,  and  false  conclusions  in 
that  letter  are  corrected,  and  the  late 
measures  of  the  government,  which 
have  been  complained  of  in  Kentucky, 
are  justified;  by  an  inhabitant  of  the 
Northwestern  territory.  Cincinnati,  O., 
Printed   by   E.   Freeman   1799  46p 


B 


Upholds    Alien    and    sedition    law. 


Otis,  Harrison  Gray,  1765-1848 

Mr  Otis'  speech  in  Congress,  on  the  sedi- 
tion law,  with  reinarks  by  the  "Ex- 
aminer" [Benjamin  .Vustin]  on  this 
important  subject.  Boston.  Printed  by 
Hews    and    Goss    [1820?]    35p 

B  Y 

Pickering,  Timothy,  1745-1829 

To  P.  Johnston,  of  Prince  Edward  county, 
A'irginia.  Trenton,  Sept  29.  1798.  A  let- 
ter written  in  his  capacity  of  Secretary 
of  state,  in  regard  to  insulting  address- 
es sent  to  the  president  of  the  United 
States  relating  principally  to  the  .Mien 
and  sedition  laws,  and  the  conduct  of 
France  toward  the  United  States.  Tren- 
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B 


Resolutions  of  Virginia  and  Kentucky,  pen- 
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and  debates  in  the  House  of  delegates 
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72,183p 

LC 

—Same.  Richmond,  Va.,  R.  I.  Smith  1835 
228p 

LC 

[Review  of  the  resolutions  submitted  in 
the  House  of  representatives  of  the  U.S. 
Congress  20th  Congress,  2d  session)  for 
the  repeal  of  the  so-called  Sedition  law 
of  1798;  and  a  discussion  of  the  liberty 
of  the  press.]  Southern  Review  3:450- 
67   1829 

Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,   1864- 
Thomas  Jefferson  and  the  Alien  and  sedi- 
tion law;  discharged  every  person  under 
it.  Free  Press  2:1  May  7,  1910 

TS 

Editors  of  the  Free  Press  were  under  indict- 
ment   for    seditious    libel. 

Sullivan,  James,   1744-1808 

Dissertation  upon  constitutional  freedom 
of  the  press  in  the  United  States  of 
America;  by  an  impartial  citizen 
[pseud.]   Boston,  Nancrede  1801   54p 

B 

Thomson,   John,   of   New   York 

An  enquiry,  concerning  the  liberty,  and 
licentiousness  of  the  press,  and  the  un- 
controulable  nature  of  the  human  mind: 
containing  an  investigation  of  the  right 
which  governments  have  to  controul 
the  free  expression  of  public  opinion, 
addressed  to  the  people  of  the  U. 
States.  New-York,  Printed  bv  Johnson 
&  Stryker,  for  the  author  1801  84p 
LC 

Tucker,  St.  George 

[Declaration  and  justification  of  the 
American  constitutional  concept  of  in- 
tellectual liberty.]  (In  Schroeder,  T. 
Constitutional  free  speech,  p  122-50. 
New  York,   Free   speech   league   1919) 

In  Blackstonc's  Commentaries.  Philadelphia 
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Blackstonc's  views  on  the  liberty  of  the  press. 
Tucker's  article  is  republished  as  chapter  lO 
of  Theodore  Schrocder's  Constitutional  free 
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United  States.  Congress.  Proceedings  and 
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Debates  in  the  Congress  of  the  United 
States,  on  the  bill  for  repealing  the 
law  "for  more  convenient  organization 
of  the  courts  of  the  United  States:" 
during  the  first  session  of  the  seventh 
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Leavenworth  &  Whiting  1802  796p 
B    NY   Y 

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With  other  documents  in  support  of 
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FREE  SPEECH 


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Warfield.  Ethelbert  Dudley,  1861- 

Kentucky  resolutions  of   1798.    .  .  .   New 
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Wharton,   Francis,    1820-1889 

State   trials   of  the   United  States   during 


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Wills,   Elbert   Vaughan 

Case    of   Doctor    Cooper.    South    Atlantic 
Quarterly   18:6-14  Jan,    1919 


Part  IV.     Economic  Motive 


General  and  Historical  Discussions 

American  by  decree.  New  Republic  22:262- 
3  April  28,  1920 

TS 

Y 

Discusses  proposal  to  suppress  foreign  lan- 
guage newspapers  and  to  deny  foreign  language 
books  to  library  readers  not  American  born. 

American  sociological  society 

Papers  and  proceedings,  ninth  annual 
meeting,  held  at  Princeton,  N.J.,  De- 
cember 28-31,  1914.  Freedom  of  com- 
munication. Chicago,  University  of  Chi- 
cago press   1915  202p 

TS 

Contents:  Freedom  of  teaching  in  the  United 
States,  by  U.  G.  Weatherly;  Reasonable  restric 
tions  upon  the  scholar's  freedom,  by  H.  S 
Pritchett;  Discussion  by  F.  L.  McVey,  E.  B, 
Gowin,  C.  C.  North,  Scott  Nearing,  E.  A.  Ross 
E.  L.  Earp,  Maurice  Parmelee;  Preliminary  re 
port  of  the  joint  committee  on  academic  free 
dom  and  academic  tenure.  Thoughtful  defences 
for  conservative  conceptions  of  academic  free- 
dom,   and    general    intellectual    freedom. 

Anarchy.  [Comment  on  the  evil  tendency  of 
the  newspapers  to  viciously  criticise 
courts  and  their  decisions.]  Canada  Law 
Journal  45:27-9  Jan,    1909 

"Anarchy"  is  here  used  chiefly  as  an  epithet 
of   reproach. 


Atkinson,  Wilmer 

A  bogy  unveiled;  argument  against  the 
adoption  of  Congress  of  H.  R.  bill  6071 
known  as  the  Loud  bill.  [Philadelphia, 
The  author]  n.d.  48p 

TS 

Deals  only  with  freedom  from  post  office 
control  over  business  methods  of  publishers. 
Author  does  not  believe  in  complete  intellectual 
freedom.  Same  is  true  of  all  other  articles  of 
this  author. 

Inquiry    into    the    true    meaning    and    in- 
tent of  the  postal  laws  relating  to  the 
public    press,    n.t.p.    Philadelphia    1908 
16p 
NY  TS 
Old   battle    renewed    for    the    freedom    of 
the    press.    Philadelphia,    W.    .Atkinson 
CO.   1907  55p 
NY  TS 


[Bates,  Charles  Austin]  1866- 

(ed.)  American  journalism  from  the 
practical  side;  what  leading  newspaper 
publishers  say  concerning  the  relations 
of  advertisers  and  publishers  and  about 
the  way  a  great  paper  should  be  made. 
New  York,  Holmes  publishing  co. 
[1897]   V.  371p 

LC 

Battle  for  free  speech:  an  issue  vital  to  the 
life  of  the  republic.  Arena  40:344-50 
Oct,   1908 

Y 

Beck,  James  Montgomery,   1861- 

Constitutionality  of  the  new  federal  law 
regulating  journalism.    New   York   1912 

Over-ruled  in:  Lewis  co.  v.  Morgan.  United 
States  Reports  229:288. 

Republished  in  the  New  York  Sun  of  Septem- 
ber 25,  1912.  Deals  with  requiring  publicity 
as  to  owners  of  periodical  publications. 
Lewis  publishing  company,  a  body  corp- 
orate in  law,  complainant-appellant, 
against  Edward  M.  Morgan,  postmaster 
in  and  for  the  city  of  New  York,  de- 
fendant-appellee. The  invalidity  of  a 
federal  censorship  of  the  press.  Brief 
for  appellant.  New  York,  C.  G.  Bur- 
goyne  [1912]  52p 
LC  Y 

Postal    bill    rider    unconstitutional.    Blow 
at   the    freedom   of   the    press.    Chicago 
Legal  News  45:61-2  Sept  28,  1912;  Ohio 
Law  Bulletin  57:419-20  Nov  7,  1912 
ILP    '12 

Becoming  intolerable.  Crucible  3:1  Feb  8, 
1920 

Republishes  statement  from  Seattle  Union 
Record  that  The  New  Republic  and  The  Survey 
are   excluded   from    high    school    library. 

Bemis,   Edward   Webster,    1860- 

Libcrty    in    economic    teaching:    [and    an 
editorial  rcioinder].  Gunton's  Magazine 
18:226-33   1900 
Y 

George  Gunton,  the  editor  of  Gunton's  maga- 
zine,  was   subsidized  by   "big  business." 

RG  '17 

Brooks,  John  Graham 

Freedom  of  assemblage  and  public  secur- 
ity. American  Sociological  Society  9:11- 
28   Dec.   1914 

TS 

Y 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Burgman,   Charles  F. 

Case    of    Helen    Wilmans.    (Philadelphia. 
The  author  1904?)  8p 
TS 

Suppressed  for  sending  thru  mail  claim  to 
cure    by    religious    mental    methods. 

Case  Stated.  Printers'  Ink  7:120  Aug  3,  1892 
TS 

Tells  of  withdrawal  of  second  class  postal 
privilege  from  Printers  Ink. 

Censoring  poverty  pictures.  Public  11:171- 
2  1908 

Chafee,    Zachariah,   jr. 

Danger  of  repression.  Bulletin  League  of 
Free  Nations  Association   1:2-3  March, 
1920 
TS 

Stenographic  report  of  speech.  Pleads  for 
more  freedom  but  believes  that  "there  are  groups 
in  the  community  who  must  be  forbidden  to 
speak." 

Crosby,   Ernest 

How  the   United  States  curtails  freedom 

of    thought.    North    American    Review 

178:605-16  April,  1904 
TS   Y 

Daily  papers  gagged;  attempt  in  Moline  to 
smother  the  INIcCaskrin's  address  at  in- 
dustrial home;  tells  voters  truth;  copies 
of  speech  are  spurned  by  the  organs 
of  the  tax-dodgers — Huber's  editor 
speciallv  insulting.  Rock  Island  News 
March  '23,    1912 

TS 

Debs,  Eugene  Victor,   1855- 

Indictment     of     Wagner     and     Tichenor. 

National    Rip    Saw    12:5    (See   also    p6) 

April,    1915 

Libertv.  Chicago,  C.  H.  Kerr  &  co.  [n.d.] 

30p 

Y  ^    "-^ 

"Don't  be  a  scab"  penalized.  New  Republic 
8:234  Oct  7,  1916 

Eastman,  Max 

Editorials.  Liberator  1:5-7  Jan,  1919 
TS 

Contents:  Right  to  speak;  Right  to  know; 
Liberation  of  prisoners;  End  of  organized  libel. 
Dealing  with  war  conditions  from  radical  social- 
ist   point    of    view. 

Max  Eastman's  address  to  the  jury  in  the 
second  Masses  trial,  in  defence  of  the 
socialist  position  and  the  right  of  free 
speech.  New  York,  Liberator  publish- 
ing CO.  n.d.  [1918]  46p 
TS 

Editors  of  the  masses  were  indicted  for 
their  published  articles.  On  this  occasion  the 
jury  for  the  second  time   disagreed. 

Trial   of    Eugene    Debs.    Liberator    1:1-12 
Nov,    1918 
TS 

Eaton,  William  D. 

Press      censorship      calmly      considered. 
Paladin  (St  Louis)  1:1  and  4  no.  3 

Fitzwater,  E.  W. 

Prisoners     mail     censored     bv     preacher. 
Crucible  3:  [3]    July  27,   1919 


TS 


Fitzwater   tells   of 
convict. 


observations 


[Flower,  Benjamin  Orange]   1858-1918 
Sinister    assault    on    the    breastworks    of 

free  government.  Arena  39:737-41  June, 

1908 
Y 

France,   Joseph    I. 

Bourbonism  against  free  speech;  history 
will  repeat  with  same  disastrous  conse- 
quences the  results  of  the  Alien  and 
sedition  laws,  opposed  by  Washington, 
Hamilton  and  Jefferson.  La  FoUette's 
Magazine  12:26-7  Feb,  1920 
TS 

Reprint  of  speech  made  in  U.S.  Senate. 
"Reprinted  because  of  the  unanswerable  argu- 
ment advanced  by  him  for  the  toilers  whose 
viewpoint  on  this  legislation  he  so  character- 
istically presented." 

Free    speech.    Outlook    107:230-1     May    30, 

1914 
RG  '10-14 

Free  speech  and  peaceable   assembly.   Sur- 
vey 38:144-5  May  12,  1917 
RG  '17 

Free  speech  denied;  officials  go  hand  in 
hand  to  crowd  tax-dodger  into  state's 
attorneyship;  constitution  is  defied;  un- 
heard of  tactics  to  get  Johnson,  tax- 
dodger  candidate,  into  office, — Moline 
mayor  balks.  Rock  Island  News  4:  [4] 
April  6,   1912 

TS 

Freedom  of  speech:  whose  concern?  New 
Republic  18:102-4  Feb  22,  1919 

Argues  that  conservatives  will  favor  free 
speech  if  possessed  of  long  range  understanding. 

Freedom  of  thought  for  emigrants.  Outlook 
75:869-70  Dec  12.   1903 

Gannett,  Lewis  S. 

Constitution  bv  candlelight.  Nation  110: 
425-7  April  3,  1920 

Goldman,  Emma,  and  Berkman,  Alexander 

Supreme  court  of  the  United  States, 
October  term,  1917.  [Emma  Goldman 
and  Alexander  Berkman.  plaintififs-in- 
error,  vs.  the  United  States]  Tran- 
script  of   record   n.p.    1917   545p 

Convicted  of  violating  war  censorship,  con- 
spiracy  to   promote   violation '  of   Draft   act. 

Supreme  court  of  the  United  States, 
October  term,  1917.  [Emma  Goldman 
and  Alexander  Berkman,  plaintiflFs-in- 
error.  against  the  L^nitcd  States,  de- 
fendant-in-error.]  Brief  on  behalf  of 
the  plaintiflfs-in-error.  [New  York  1917] 
109p 

TS 

Gompers,   Samuel,    1850- 

Loosening  mental  fetters.  [Editorial] 
American  Fcderationist  21:120-1  Feb, 
1914 

TS 

Deals  with  academic  freedom  in  relation  with 
case    of    Professor    Scott    Nearing. 


FREE  SPEECH 


89 


Haffer,   Pavd  R. 

Col  Joab  defends  Washington's  name; 
gets  out  warrant  for  Paul  R.  Haffer, 
whose  letter  in  Tribune  letter  box  ac- 
cused Washington  of  drinking.  Tacoma 
Tribune  March  18,  1916 
TS 

Convicted  of  libeling  George  Washington  by 
accusing  him  of  drunkenness,  profanity  and 
slave  holding.  Defendant  had  made  himself 
disagreeable  as  a  socialist.  Conviction  affirmed. 
For    other    items    see:    Personal    motive. 

Haines,   Austin   P. 

Borrowing    with    a    club.    New    Republic 
18:273-5  March  29,  1919 
TS 

Tells  of  lawless  suppression  of  speech  and 
assembly  during  war,  especially  of  the  Non- 
partisan  League. 

Hamilton,  John  J. 

Plea  for  the  business  freedom  of  the 
American  press;  an  address  delivered 
before  the  Congressional  postal  com- 
mission at  New  York,  October  2,  1906; 
by  John  J.  Hamilton  of  the  Iowa  Home- 
stead, speaking  as  member  of  the 
Postal  commission  of  the  National 
agricultural  press  league.  Des  Moines, 
la..  Homestead  co.  [1906]  22p 
TS 

Hays,   Arthur   Garfield 

Free  speech  and  assemblage.  Facts  (St 
Louis)  1:2  Dec  11.  1919 

Deals  with  unsuccessful  effort  to  suppress 
Conference  of  Committee  of  forty  eight,  to  or- 
ganize a  new  political  party.  "We  won  out, 
not  on  our  constitutional  rights  but  on  our 
clean  collars."  Also  quotes  long  editorial  from 
Globe — Democrat    of    previous    day. 

Holmes,  John   Haynes 

Repression  the  road  to  revolution.  Ar- 
bitrator 2:3-10  March.  1920;  La  Fol- 
lette's  Magazine   12:38+  March,   1920 

Around  deportations  of  radicals;  argues  the 
ineffectiveness  of  repression  except  to  promote 
violent  revolution. 
Stoning  the  prophets;  men  are  hooted 
and  hissed  today  for  the  same  ofTenses 
that  abolitionists  were  mobbed  for.  La 
Follette's  Magazine  12:22  Feb,  1920 
TS 

Discusses  cases  of  Rabbi  Stephen  .S.  Wise 
and  Rev  Percy  S.  Grant  who  invited  trouble 
by  defending  freedom  of  opinion  for  economic 
radicals.      Republished    from    Unity. 

Holt.    Hamilton,    1872- 

Commercialism    and    journalism.    Boston 

and    New    York.    Houghton,    MifHin    & 

CO.  1009  (5).  105p 
B   NY   Y 

How    censorship    works    in    Canada.    New 
York  American  May  11.  1916 

How  the  censorship  works  in   Kansas.  Ad- 
vertiser's Guide  Nov.   1894  p6-7 
TS 

-Mlcged  postal_  fraud  in  advertising  business 
college,    no    conviction. 

Hunt,  Albert  F. 

Arrested!  The  Item's  editor  the  victim 
of  political  rings  and  newspaper  en- 
emies.   .  .  .   The   book   which    we   pub- 


lish in  chapters  is  on  the  shelves  of  the 
Baptist  church  .  .  .  Newburyport  Item 
Aug  7,   1897 
TS 

Alleges  attacks  upon  political  grafter  to  be 
real  motive  for  arrest  on  "obscenity"  of  gth 
chapter  of  "Almost  fourteen"  by  Mortimer 
Warren. 

Prosecution!  Persecution!  Malignity!  The 
whys  and  wherefores  of  a  bitter  fight. 
Newburyport  Item  Aug  14,  1897 
TS 

Tells  of  arrest  and  asserts  that  "Almost 
fourteen"  would  not  have  been  called  "obscene" 
except  for  editors  criticism  of  corruption  of 
police  and  city  administration  of  Newburyport, 
Mass. 

Hurt,    Walter 

Despotism.   Assayer  June,    1899   p9 
TS 

Hurt  was  arrested  for  alleged  "obscenity"  in 
his  periodical  the  Gattling  Gun.  The  real  motive 
is  said  to  have  been  to  get  even  because  "he 
printed  some  inside  facts  about  certain  shady 
epochs  in  the  career  of  Senator  Hanna  and  his 
political   friends." 

Hold-up    of    Paladin    is    brought    to    end. 
Paladin    1:1    March  23,    1918 
Issue  of  free  speech.  Review  1:634-5  Dec  6, 

1919 
Jones,    Mary 

Testimony  of  Mrs   Mary  Jones.   (In:   In- 
dustrial    relations;     final     report     and 
testimony.       11:10618-45       Washington, 
DC,    Government   print,    off.    1916) 
TS 

An  extraordinary  story  of  persecution  of  in- 
dustrial   agitators. 

Journal  of  Commerce  &  Commercial   Bul- 
letin 

Congress  has  not  abridged  the  freedom 
of  the  press.  In  the  Supreme  court  of 
the  United  States.  [Journal  of  Com- 
merce &  Commercial  Bulletin,  appel- 
lant, vs.  Frank  H.  Hitchcock  as  post- 
master general  of  the  United  States, 
George  W.  Wickersham,  as  attorney 
general  of  the  United  States,  et  al., 
appellees;  Lewis  Publishing  Co..  ap- 
pellant, vs.  Edward  M.  Morgan,  as 
postmaster  of  the  United  States  of 
.America  in  and  for  New  York  city.l 
Brief  in  behalf  of  the  United  States. 
Washington.  D.C.,  Government  print, 
off.    1912    S4p 

TS 

Supreme  court  of  the  United  States,  Oc- 
tober term.  1912.  [The  Journal  of  Com- 
merce &  Commercial  Bulletin,  appel- 
lant, against  Frank  Hitchcock,  as  post- 
master general  of  the  United  States  of 
America,  et  al..  appellees.]  Supplemental 
brief  of  counsel  for  Journal  of  Com- 
merce on  construction  of  the  act.  New 
York.  C.  G.  Burgoyne,  printer  n.d.  17p 

TS 

Deals  with  law  requiring  publicity  as  to 
owners,    etc..    of   periodical    publications. 

Supreme  court  of  the  United  States, 
October  term,  1912.  [Journal  of  Com- 
merce and  Commercial  Bulletin,  appel- 
lant, vs.  Frank  H.  Hitchcock,  as  post- 
master   general    of    the    United    States 


90 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Journal  of  Commerce  — Continued 

of  America,  et  al.,  appellees.]    Brief  of 
counsel  for  appellant.  New  York,  C.  G. 
Burgoyne,    printer   n.d.    51p 
TS 

Supreme  court  •  of  the  United  States, 
October  term,  1912.  [The  Journal  of 
Commerce  &  Commercial  Bulletin,  ap- 
pellant, vs.  Frank  H.  Hitchcock,  as 
postmaster  general  of  the  United  States; 
George  W.  Wickersham  as  attorney- 
general  of  the  United  States.,  et  al.] 
Transcript  of  record.  Washington,  D.C., 
Judd  &  Detweiler,  printers  1912  24p 
TS 
Lacy,    George 

Liberty  and  law:  being  an  attempt  at  the 
refutation  of  the  individualism  of  Mr 
Herbert  Spencer  and  the  political  econ- 
omists: an  exposition  of  natural  rights, 
and  of  the  principles  of  justice,  and 
of  socialism  and  a  demonstration  of 
the  worthlessness  of  the  supposed  dog- 
mas of  orthodox  political  economy. 
London,  S.  Sonnenschein,  Lowrey  & 
CO.  1880  xxii,377p 
TS 

Chapter  lo,  Liberty  of  the  press  and  freedom 
of  speech,  P348-77.  Opposed  to  unabridged  free- 
dom. 

Larkin,  James  E.  et  al 

To   the   liberal   public    [Broadside] 

Deals  with  arrest  of  Charles  L.  Govan,  James 
W.  Adams,  and  James  E.  Larkin,  for  alleged 
obscenity.  Acquited.  Defendants  were  mem- 
bers of  the  Home  Colony  of  anarchists  in  Wash- 
ington. 

Law  of  the  Debs  case;  constitutional  con- 
struction by  the  Supreme  court.  New 
York  and  Washington,  National  civil 
liberties  bureau  [1919]  4p 

TS 

Lewis,  Alfred  Henry,   1842- 
That  Idaho  contempt  case.  Hearst's  Mag- 
azine 24:224-34  Aug,   1913 

Y 

Liber,   B. 

Dr  Liber  and  the  post  office.  New  Re- 
public 20:61  Aug  13,  1919 

TS 

Tells  of  the  suppression  of  his  book  on  Sex- 
ual life,  on  the  pretense  of  its  "indecency"  but 
with  private  confession  that  it  was  because  too 
radical  in  giving  economic  explanation  of  disease 
and    prostitution. 

Liberty  imperilled  through  the  encroach- 
ments of  the  judiciary.  Arena  Feb,  1906 
pi  89-94 

TS 

Deals  with  contempt  of  court  cases,  mostly 
with  that  of  Thomas  Patterson.  See  Patterson 
V.  People  of  Colorado;  Supreme  Court  Reporter 
27:556. 

Limits  of  free  speech;  Senator  La  Fol- 
lette's  speeches.  Literary  Digest  55:11 
Oct  20,    1917 

RG  '17 

Lowell,  Abbott  Lawrence,   1856- 

Public  opinion  and  popular  government. 
New  York,  Longmans,  Green  &  com- 
pany xiv,415p   1913 

uses 


McKaig,   Ray 

Farmers    mob    the    mobbers.    Public    21: 

1241-2  Sept  28,   1918 
New  Minnesota  despotism.  Public  21:465- 

7  April   13,   1918 

Deals    with    Non-partisan    league. 

Magnes,  Judah  Leon 

General  amnesty  demanded;  United  States 

lags  behind  other  countries  in  granting 

pardon    to    its    political    prisoners.    La 

Follette's  Magazine  11:72-34-  May,  1919 

TS 

Full    report    of    address    made    April    17,    19 19 
at   Washington,   D.C. 

Set    the    prisoners    free.    Forward    3:45-6 
March,  1919 

Deals  _  with     industrial     agitators     under     war 
censorship    and    with    conscientious    objectors. 

Morgan,  Edward  M. 

The  Lewis  publishing  company,  a  body 
corporate  in  law,  complainant-appellant, 
against  Edward  M.  Morgan,  post- 
master in  and  for  the  city  of  New  York, 
defendant-appellee.  The  invalidity  of  a 
federal  censorship  of  the  press.  Appel- 
lant's reply  brief.  New  York,  C.  G. 
Burgoyne  [1912] 
The  Lewis  publishing  company,  a  body 
corporate  in  law,  complainant-appellant, 
against  Edward  M.  Morgan,  postmaster 
in  and  for  the  city  of  New  York,  de- 
fendant-appellee. The  invalidity  of  a 
federal  censorship  of  the  press.  Brief 
for  appellant;  James  M.  Beck,  counsel 
for  appellant.  New  York,  C.  G.  Bur- 
goyne [1912]  52p 
LC   TS  Y 

Deals  with  law  compelling  publicity  as  to 
owners    of    periodicals. 

Nineteen  numbers  of  the  Radical  Reformer, 
and  Working  Man's  Advocate:  a  Phila- 
delphia weekly  publication,  edited  and 
published  by  Thomas  brothers:  to 
which  is  appended;  A  letter  to  Mr 
Daniel  Webster  .  .  .  Philadelphia, 
Coates,  printer  1836  208p 

TS 

Contains  matter  by  Cobbett  and  some  ac- 
count of  his  trial.  _  Also  "Remarks  of  Benjamin 
Franklin  on  toleration." 

Notable  triumph  for  free  speech  in  Los  An- 
geles. Arena  40:350-1  1908 
Y 

Owen,  George  E. 

Authority;  an  address  delivered  at  the 
meeting  of  the  Carter  county,  Okla- 
homa, Teacher's  association,  December 
3,  1908.  Guthrie,  Okla.,  State  capital  co. 
[1908?]  12p 
TS 

Pacifist   pilgrims.    Literary    Digest   55:16-17 

Sept  15,  1917 
RG  '17 

Parker,  Alton  Brooks,   1852- 

Rights  of  donors.  Educational  Review  23; 
15-21   1902 
Y 


FREE  SPEECH 


91 


[Patterson,  Thomas] 

Nullihcation  of  the  ends  of  free  govern- 
ment thru  judicial  usurpations  in  the 
interests  of  corporate  wealth.  Arena 
Sept,   1906 

For  decision  see  Supreme  Court  Reporter  27: 
556.  Deals  with  conviction  of  Thomas  Patter- 
son for  contempt  of  court  based  upon  cartoons 
which  are  reproduced  in  Arena. 

Point  of  order.  Independent  90:8  April  2, 
1917 

RG  '17 

Press  and  finance.  Blackwood's  Magazine 
164:639-50  1898 

Y 

Proceedings  of  the  First  national  news- 
paper conference  meeting  held  at  Mad- 
ison [Wis.]  July  29-Aug  1,  1912.  Mad- 
ison, Wis.,  Published  by  the  university 
1913 

TS 

Deals  mostly  with  censorship   by   advertisers. 

Reedy,  William  Marion,   1862- 

Myth  of  a  free  press;  address  delivered 
before  the  Missouri  press  association  at 
Excelsior  Springs,  Mo.,  May  28,  1908 
...   St   Louis,   The   Mirror    1908  31p 

LC  TS 

Deals  with  economic  control  and  advertiser's 
censorship. 

Reid,   Hugh 

What's   the   matter   with   the   post    office. 
Public  22:1041-3 
TS 

Gives    historical    account    of    growth    of    post 

office  censorship  in  the  U.S. 
Removing  the  gag.  La  Follette's  Magazine 

14:4-5  June   15,    1912 
TS 

Criticism  of  autocratic  governmental  action 
in  forbidding  railway  mail  clerk  right  of  peti- 
tion under  the  ukase  of  Roosevelt  confirmed  by 
Taft. 

Reynolds,  James  Bronson 

Reasonable  restrictions  upon  freedom  of 
speech.  American  Sociological  Society 
9:46-66  Dec,  1914 

TS 

Right  of  free  assemblage.  American  Maga- 
zine  66:204-8  June,   1908 

Right  of  free  speech.  Outlook  88:813-15 
April  11,  1908 

Ross.  Edward  Alsworth,   1866- 

Changing  America;  studies  in  contempo- 
rary society.  New  York,  Century  co. 
1912  236p 

Pages    109   to    136   are   on    Suppression   of   im- 
portant  news. 
Freedom  of  communication  and  the  strug- 
gle for  right.  Survey  33:405  Jan  9,  1915 
TS 
Russian  censor  and  the   Outlook.   Outlook 

73:351    Feb   7,   1903 
Russian  press  censorship.  Outlook  76:481-3 

Feb  27.  1904 
Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,   1864- 

Censoring  free  speech  advocates.  Call 
Magazine  Nov   16,   1919  p3+ 

Account  of  how  U.  S.  educational  department 
in  reconstruction  asked  for  and  then  rejected 
gift  of  free-speech  literature.  Giving  titles  of 
rejected  items. 


Free    press    anlhology.    New    York,    Free 
speech   league   and   Truth    Seeker   pub- 
lishing CO.  1909  267p 
TS 

Government  by  spies.  Twentieth  Century 
Magazine  3:140-4  Nov,  1910 
TS 

Methods  of  constitutional  construction, 
the  synthetic  method  illustrated  on  the 
free  speech  clause  of  the  federal  con- 
stitution, with  three  supplements  bear- 
ing on  the  rights  of  revolutionists,  by 
James  Mill,  J.  L.  DeLolme  and  John 
Cartwright.  New  York,  Free  speech 
league  1914  106p 
TS 

Political  crimes  defined.  Michigan  Law 
Review  18:30-44  Nov,  1919;  Call  Maga- 
zine Jan   11,   1920  p6-8 

Outlines  psychologic  aspect  of  criminology, 
and  illustrates  it  in  cases  of  political  offenders, 
in  contrast  with  customary  legal  usage.  European 
revolutionists  should  be  protected  here,  and 
war's    opponents    here    pardoned. 

Sercombe,  Parker  H. 

Free  speech?  Not  yet — not  yet.  Physical 
Culture    18:48  July,   1907 

Deals  with  "obscenity."  Also  the  mobbing 
of  negro  editor  of  Voice  of  the   Negro. 

Shillady,   John    R. 

Mobbing  of  John  R.  Shillady,  Austin, 
Texas,  August  22,  1919;  also  a  state- 
ment by  the  N.A.A.C.P.  October  1919. 
New  York,  National  Association  for 
the  advancement  of  the  colored  people 
1919  6p 

TS 

Gives  detailed  account  showing  that  mobbing 
occurred  for  holding  opinions  not  even  publicly 
expressed  in  Austin. 
Mobbing  of  John  R.  Shillady,  Secretary 
of  the  National  association  for  the  ad- 
vancement of  colored  people,  Austin, 
Texas,  Aug  22.  1919;  county  judge 
boasts  of  his  leadership  in  the  mobbing; 
governor  W.  P.  Hobby  of  Texas  pub- 
licly approves  the  mob  attack.  New 
York,  National  association  for  the  ad- 
vancement of  colored  people  1919  lip 
Mobbing  was  by  white  officials  for  his  work 
among  the  negroes. 

Shufeldt,  Robert  WUson,  1850- 

The  Negro:  the  fatal  factor  in  the  Amer- 
ican republic.  Illustrated  Review  1:3-4 
Nov  21,  1908 

A  criticism  of  free  speech,  pointing  out  the 
menace  occasioned  by  the  immense  number  of 
negroes   in   the   United   States. 

Spillman,  W.  J. 

Spillman's  story  of  dispute  over  produc- 
tion cost  of  farm  products.  Farmer's 
Open  Forum  4:10-11    Feb,  1919 

TS 

Shows  how  Rockfeller  General  education  board 
controlled  U.S.  Agricultural  department  against 
educating  farmers  and  how  it  sought  to  control 
university  education  of  farmers  on  cost  of 
production. 

Sprading,  Charles  T. 

Ruled  bv  the  press.  Los  Angeles.  Cal., 
G.  Rissman,  322  Story  bldg.  n.d.  [1918?] 
13p 


92 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Steffens,  Joseph  Lincoln,    1866- 

An  answer  and  an  answer.  [An  argument 
for  freedom  of  the  press.]  Everybody's 
Magazine    25:717-20    Nov,    1911 

Y 

[Free  speech  vs.  censorship.]  Everybody's 
Magazine  25:796-8  Dec,  1911 

Y 

Supreme  court  upholds  newspaper  publicity 
law.  Law  Students'  Helper  21:23-4  July, 
1913 

ILP  '13 

[Thorpe,   Herbert   A.] 

New  Jersey  court  of  errors  and  appeals. 
[The  mayor  and  aldermen  of  Jersey 
City,  plaintifif-appcllecs,  against  Herbert 
A.  Thorpe,  defendant-appellant.]  n.p., 
n.d.  9p 

Convicted  of  distributing  circulars  against 
compulsory  vaccination  under  ordinance  against 
littering  the  streets. 

Throttling  the  Russian  press.  Literary  Di- 
gest 47:124-5  July  26,  191'3 
Y 

Current  Russian  press  opinions  on  new  press 
bill. 

To  the  American  People;  report  upon  the 
illegal  practices  of  the  United  States 
Department  of  Justice.  Washington, 
D.C.  National  popular  government 
league    May,    1920   67p 

An  eminent  committee  headed  by  R.  G. 
Brown,  exhibits  some  of  the  official  lawlessness 
under  Espionage  act  and  against  industrial 
radicals. 

Trench,  F.  Chenevix 

Russian  journalistic  press.  Blackwood's 
Magazine    148:115-26   1890 

Y 

Triumph  for  free  speech  in  Los  Angeles. 
Arena  40:350-1   Oct,  1908 

United  States.  Commission  on  industrial 
relations 
Industrial  relations,  final  report  and 
testimony  submitted  to  Congress,  vll 
Washington,  D.C,  Government  print- 
ing ofifice  1916 

Waisbrooker,  Lois 

Great  conspiracv.  To-morrow   Sept,   1906 
p68-72 
TS 

Criticises  postal  cetisorship  in  relation  to  rad- 
ical   sex    and    industrial    reformers. 

Wallas,   Graham 

The  price  of  tolerance.  Atlantic  Monthly 
125:116-18  Jan,  1920 
TS 

Tells  of  suppression  of  Thorstein  Veblen's 
"Imperial  Germany,"  and  pleads  for  larger 
tolerance    of    radicals. 

Whose  might  is  right.  Call  Magazine 
March   13,   1921    p3 

Shows  permitted  advocacy  of  "might  is  right" 
by  millionaires  and  its  suppression  when  advo- 
cated  by   laborers. 

Wilgus,  William  H. 

Appeals     for     sane     democracy.     Illinois 
State  Register  July  (after  18th)   1919 
TS 

In  column  Voice  of  the  people,  he  defends 
utmost  of  free  speech   for   radicals. 


Windolph,  F.  Lyman 

Two     sins     against     tolerance.     Atlantic 
Monthly    125:473-8   April,    1920 
TS 

A  very  conservative  lawyer  pleads  for  toler- 
ance of  economic  radicals. 

Wisconsin.  University.  University  exten- 
sion division 

University  of  Wisconsin  through  the 
University  extension  division  lends  its 
auspices  to  newspaper  and  magazine 
men  for  the  first  National  newspaper 
conference,  to  consider  the  question: 
Are  newspaper  and  magazine  writers 
free  to  tell  the  truth?  If  not,  why  not, 
and  what  can  be  done  about  it?  [Mad- 
ison, Wis.?  1912]  [8]p 
LC 

Deals  mostly  with  unlegalized  censorship  by 
advertisers. 

Wood,  Roger  B. 

Abusing  freedom  of  speech.  Forum  56:5-7 
July,  1916 
RG  '16 
Woods,  Arthur 

Testimony  of  Mr  Arthur  Woods.  (In: 
Industrial  relations:  final  report  and 
testimony.  ll:10550-8)_  Washington, 
D.C  .  Government  printing  office  1916) 
Police  commissioner  of  New  York  city  tells 
of  beneficent  effect  of  his  having  enlarged  free 
speech.  See  also,  Steffens,  L. ;  Free  speech 
with    and    without. 

World's  account  of  Burleson  barred  from 
the  wires  by  telegraph  company  officials 
.  .  .  Burleson  orders  all  postal  telegraph 
news  suppressed.  New  York  Evening 
World  April  23,  1919 

Deals  with  news  censorship  as  to  government 
management  of  telegraph  and  striking  tele- 
graphers. 

Anarchists 

Abbott,  Leonard  D. 

Fight     for     free     speech     in     Tarrvtown. 
Mother  Earth  9:107-11  June,  1914 
TS 

Gives  account  of  transferance  of  activities  of 
Upton  Sinclair's  Free  Silence  League  against 
John  D.  Rockefeller  from  New  York  city  to 
Tarrvtown,   Mr.    Rockefeller's  place   of   residence. 

Fight  in  Tarrytown  and  its  tragic  out- 
come. Mother  Earth  9:158-64  July,  1914 

TS 

Tells  of  progress  of  free  speech  fight  and 
dynamite  plot,  explosion  and  death  of  plotters 
who  would  have  used  dynamite  to  get  free 
speech. 

Abrams,  Jacob,  et  al 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  United 
States  October  term — 1918,  no.  316. 
[Jacob  .A.brams.  et  al,  plaintiflf-in-error 
against  United  States  of  America,  de- 
fendant in  error.]  In  error  to  District 
Court  of  the  United  States  for  the 
Southern  District  of  New  York.  Brief 
of  plaintiflf  in  error.  Harry  Weinberger, 
Attornev  for  plaintiflf-in-error 

This  brief  reproduces  the  leaflets  on  which 
the  defendants  received  a  20-year  sentence. 
They  were  anarchists  opposed  to  Imperial 
Germany,  but  also  opposed  to  intervention  in 
soviet  Russia.     Leaflets  sought  to  stop  that  inter- 


FREE  SPEECH 


93 


Transcript  of  record.  Supreme  court  of 
the  United  States,  October  term,  1918. 
[Jacob  Abrams,  et  al,  plaintiff-in-error 
vs.  the  Court  of  the  United  States  for 
the    southern    district    of    New    York.] 


TS 


[1919]    168p 

Sentenced  to  20  years  for  opposing  interven- 
tion in  Russia.     See  also  under:   Bolshevists. 

Aldred,   Guy   A, 

Dogmas  discarded;  revised,  extended, 
and,  in  parts,  abridged  from  an  auto- 
biographical fragment  published  in  1908; 
author's  1909  trial  for  sedition  affi.xed. 
London,  Bakunin  press  1913  31p 
TS 

Deals   with    anarchism,    and   Indian    revolt. 

American  government  by  clubs  and  Cos- 
sacks.   Public   11:3-4   1908 

Anarchist  arrests.  Truth  Seeker  33:708-9 
Nov    10,    1906 

Editorial  on  arrest  of  three  anarchists  for 
alleged  justification  of  the  assassination  of  Pres- 
ident   McKinley. 

Anarchist   deportations.    New    Republic   21: 

96-8  Dec  24.  1919 
TS 

Gives  specific  information  as  to  the  kind  of 
opinions    that    were    made    basis    of    deportation. 

Ark  with  300  reds  sails  early  today  for  un- 
named port.  .  .  .  Bcrkman  and  Gold- 
man go;  guard  of  marines  on  board  and 
revolvers  are  given  to  125  of  crew  .  .  . 
relatives  denied  chance  to  say  good- 
bye ..  .  New  York  Times  69:1-3  Dec 
21.   1919 

Gives  long  account  of  deportation  of  300 
socialists,    anarchists,    bolshevists    to    Russia. 

Berkman,  Alexander 

Blast  raided.  Mother  Earth  11:726-7  Jan, 
1917 
TS 

The  Blast  was  an  anarchist  anti-militarist 
periodical    edited    by    Berkman. 

— and  Goldman,  Emma 

Anarchism  on   trial;  speeches  .  .  .  before 
the  United  States  district  court  in  the 
city  of  New  York,  July,  1917.  n.p.,  n.d. 
1917  87p 
TS 

Convicted  under  war  censorship.  Reprinted 
with  additions  from  Mother  Earth  v.  12,  July, 
1917. 

B[rownson]   R[oswell]   R. 

Drawing  the  color  line.   New  Justice   1:2 
June  1.  1919 

Tells  of  two  people  convicted  for  having  red 
ribbons  tied  to  a  stick  and  thus  waving  it. 
Penalty   four   months   in   jail. 

Calvert,  Bruce 

Emma  Goldman  and  the  police.  [Griffith, 
Ind.  The  author]  n.d.  26p 
TS 

Defends    free    speech    for    anarchists. 

Case  of   Edward   F.   Mylius.   Mother   Earth 

7:370-2  Jan,    1912 
TS 

Mylius  had  libeled  King  George  of  England 
by  charging  a  morganatic  marriage,  has  been 
convicted,  and  now  it  was  sought  to  deport  him 
as   an   anarchist.      See   under   Mylius. 


Chafee,  Zechariah,  jr. 

Legislation    against    anarchy.    New    Re- 
public 19:379-85  July  23,  1919 
Christian    civilisation    in    war    and    peace. 

Mother  Earth  7:253-4  Oct,  1912 
TS 

Reproduces  cartoon  for  exhibiting  which 
Ludovico  Caminita  was  arrested  because  of  al- 
leged   provocation    of    war    with    Italy. 

Cleyre,    Voltairine    de 

Free    speech    fight    in    Philadelphia;    (re- 
port.;   Mother  Earth  4:237-9  Oct,   1909 
TS 

Tells  of  suppression  of  Emma  Goldman.  For 
sequel  see.  Roe,  Gilbert  E.,  "Reasonable  restric- 
tions upon  freedom  of  assembly,"  P3-4. 

On    liberty.    Mother    Earth   4:151-5    July, 
1909 
TS 

Speech     at    Cooper    Union,     N.Y.,     protesting 
against    suppression    of    Emma    Goldman. 
Our  police   censorship.   Mother    Earth  4: 
297-300  Nov,   1909 
TS 

Speech  at  protest  meeting  over  suppression 
of    Emma    Goldman. 

Constitutional  freedom  or  New  Jersey  tyr- 
anny;   which?    n.p.,    n.d.    16p 
TS 

Opposed    proposed    anti-anarchist   laws. 

Cook,  Cassius  V. 

San    Francisco    echoes.    Mother    Earth   4: 
29-30  March,   1909 
TS 

Tells  of  suppression  of  Emma  Goldman  and 
arrest    of   Alexander    Horr. 

[Cooper    Union    and    free    speech.]     [Edi- 
torial]  Mother  Earth  5:308-9  Dec,  1910 
TS 

Tells  of  refusal  to  rent  hall  to  Ferrer  Asso- 
ciation.     Also   conviction   of   Fred   Warren. 

Crosby,  Ernest  Howard,   1856-1906 

How  the   United   States  curtails  freedom 

of  thought.  North  American  Review  178: 

605-16  April,   1904 
TS  Y 

Reprinted,  1904,  by  the  North  American  re- 
view publishing  company.  Opposes  anti-anar- 
chist   immigration    laws. 

Cunningham,  F.  jr. 
Anarchist     deportations.     New     Republic 
22:287    April   28,    1920 
TS 

Reviews  a  previous  discussion  of  this  ques- 
tion in  New  Republic,  and  defends  the  govern- 
ment   action    in    deportations. 

Davenport,  John 

Gagging    free    speech.    Mother    Earth    8: 
331-2  Jan,   1914 
TS 

Gives  account  of  suppressing  Emma  Goldman 
(anarchist)    at   Patterson,    N.J. 

Dubois,  Felix 

Anarchist  peril;  tr.,  cd.  and  enlarged  with 
a     supplementary     chapter     by     Ralph 
Derechef.   London,    T.    F.    Unwin    1894 
HCL 
Edwards,   George 

Free  speech  in  San  Diego.  Mother  Earth 
10:182-5   July,    1915 
TS 

Reports  that  Reitman  and  Goldman  mobbed 
and  deported  three  years  ago  were  allowed  to 
address    three    meetings    in    San    Diego. 


94 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Eltzbacher,  Paul 

Der    anarchismus.    Berlin,    G.    Guttentag 
1900 
HCL 

Bibliographic,   p[vii]-xii. 
Also    published    in    French. 
Anarchism;   tr.   by  S.   T.  Byington.   New 
York,  B.  R.  Tucker  1908 
HCL 

Ferrer  y  Guardia,  Francisco,  1859-1909 
Origin  and  ideals  of  the  Modern  school; 
tr.  by  Joseph  McCabe.  New  York  and 
London,    Putnam    1913    147p 
McCabe,  J.    Martyrdom   of   Ferrer.    Lon- 
don,  Watts   &  CO.   1909 
LC  TS 

Fight     for     freedom     of     speech.     Secular 
Thought  36:107-12  April,  1910 
Review    of    Alden    Freeman's    pamphlet. 

Flower,  Benjamin  Orange,  1858-,  and  others 
In    defence    of    free    speech;    five    essays 

from  the  Arena,  and  written  by  B.  O. 

Flower,    Rev    Elliot    White,    Louis    F. 

Post    and    Theodore    Schroeder.    New 

York,  Free  speech  league  1908  24p 
Sinister    assault    on    the    breastworks    of 

free   government.   Arena  June,    1908 

Foulke,   William   Dudley 

.  .  .    Free    speech    ...    in    the    Chicago 
Record-Herald  of  March  21.  Public  10?: 
1237  March  28,   1908 
TS 

General  discussion  and  reference  suppression 
of    anti-slavery    literature    and    Russian    method. 

Four  thousand  deported  since  armistice. 
New  York  Evening  Sun  33:1  Jan  IS, 
1920 

Reports  speech  of  secretary  of  labor  as  claim- 
ing that  all  had  advocated  violent  overthrow  of 
government. 

Fox,  Jay 

Editor  found  guilty.  Agitator  Jan  15,  1912 
TS 

Guilty  of  matter  "tending  to  create  disrespect 
for    law." 

Find  Fox  guilty  after  25  hours;  jury  head- 
ed by  woman  asks  leniencv.  .  .  .  Daily 
Ledger   (Tacoma,  Wash.)  Jan   13,   1912 
See   also   Daily   Ledger   for  Jan.    12,    1912    for 
sidelights   on   the   trial. 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  state  of 
Washington.  [The  state  of  Washington, 
plaintiff  and  respondent,  vs.  Jay  Fox, 
defendant  and  appellant. 1  Appeal  from 
the  Superior  court  for  Pierce  county; 
appellant's  reply  brief.  Tacoma,  Wash., 
Allen  &  Lamborn  printing  co.  n.d.  38p 
TS 

Fox's  conviction  was  affirmed.  See  Pacific 
Reporter  127:1111.  Criticised  in:  Truth  Seek- 
er Dec  14,  1912.  See  also  New  York  Law 
Journal    Dec    31,    1912.    P1604. 

In  the  supreme  court  of  the  state  of 
Washington.  [The  state  of  Washington, 
plaintiff  v.  Jay  Fox,  defendant.]  Ap- 
peal from  the  supreme  court  for  Pierce 
county.  Appellant's  brief;  Jas.  J.  An- 
derson, attorney  for  appellant.  Tacoma, 


Wash.,    Allen   &  Lamborn  printing  co. 
n.d.   44p 
TS 

See  brief  of  plaintiff  in  error  for  more  in- 
formation. 

In  the  supreme  court  of  the  state  of 
Washington.  [The  state  of  Washing- 
ton, respondent  v.  Jay  Fox,  appellant.] 
Appeal  from  the  superior  court  of  the 
state  of  Washington  for  Pierce  county. 
Respondent's  brief;  J.  L.  McMurray, 
procuring  attorney,  n.p.,  n.d.  25p 
TS 

Conviction  affirmed.  See  Supreme  Court  Re- 
ports 35:383-  Commented  upon  in  Central  Law 
Journal  80:289-90  April   16,   1915. 

In  the  supreme  court  of  the  state  of 
Washington.  [The  state  of  Washing- 
ton, plaintiff  and  respondent  v.  Jay 
Fox,  defendant  and  appellant.]  Appeal 
from  the  supreme  court  for  Pierce 
county;  appellant's  reply  brief.  Jas.  J. 
Anderson,  attorney  for  appellant.  Ta- 
coma, Wash.  Allen  &  Lamborn  print- 
ing CO.  n.d.  38p 

TS 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  state  of 
Washington.  [The  state  of  Washing- 
ton, plaintiff,  vs.  Jay  Fox,  defendant.] 
Appellant's  brief.  Tacoma,  Wash.,  Al- 
len &  Lamborn  print,  co.  n.d.  44p 
The  nude  and  the  prudes.  Agitator  July 
1.  1911 

TS 

Reprinted  in  Mother  Earth  7:28-9  March, 
1912.  Also  in  Schroeder,  T.  Free  speech 
league;  and  in  broadside  form.  Convicted  on 
this  as  tending  to  create  disrespect  for  law. 
See  Pacific  Reporter  127:1111;  also  United  States 
Reports   236:274. 

Passing  show;  arrest  of  the  editor.  Agit- 
ator 1:[1]   Sept  1,  1911 
TS 

For  article  "tending  to  create  disrespect  for 
law."  Convicted.  See  United  States  Reports 
236:274.  Also  Schroeder,  T.  Free  speech  case 
of  Jay  Fox,  which  reproduces  offending  article. 
See  also:  Industrial  relations,  final  report  and 
testimony.  11:10892-4.  See  also  Tacoma 
Times,  Aug.  24,  19 11. 
"Revolutionary"  editor  exposed.  Agitator 
Jan  1,  1912 
TS 

Here  Fox  criticises  the  editor  of  Freie  .\r- 
beiter  Stimme  for  his  indifference  to  Fox's  ar- 
rest. Cites  contrary  attitude  by  James  F. 
Morton   in   Truth    Seeker   Oct    14.    191 1- 

Supreme  court  of  the  United  States,  Oc- 
tober term,  1914.  [Jay  Fox,  plaintifif-in- 
error  v.  State  of  Washington,  defcndant- 
in-error.  On  writ  of  error  no.  134]  Brief 
for  plaintifT-in-error.  Gilbert  E.  Roe, 
counsel  for  plaintiff-in-error.  n.p.,  n.d. 
17p 

TS 

Two  months  in  the  tank.  Agitator  Feb 
IS.  1912 

TS 

Two  months  in  jail  for  publishing  Nude  and 
prudes,    commented    upon. 

Franklin,   Fabian 

Some  free  speech  delusions.  Unpopular 
Review  2:223-35   Oct,   1914 


FREE  SPEECH 


95 


Free  speech  committee 

Demand   for   free    speech.    Mother    Earth 
4:107-9  June,    1909 
TS 

A   manifesto   on   suppressions   of   Emma   Gold- 
man. 

Free  speech  league 

Imprisonment     of     John     Turner.     [New 

York,  The  author  1903?]  4p 
Press   bulletin,   no.    1-2   New    York,    Free 
speech  league   1903 
NY  TS 

Relates     to     case     for     deportation     of     John 
Turner. 

Freeman,   Alden 

Fight    for    free    speech    a    supplement    to 
law-breaking    by    the    police,    n.p.    1909 
36p 

Deals    with    suppression    of    Emma    Goldman. 

Meaning  of  abridged  "freedom  of  speech," 

in   Fight  for  free  speech  a  supplement 

to,    law-breaking   by    the    police.    [East 

Orange,  N.J.  1909]  34p 

TS 

Protest   meeting   at    Cooper   Union;    (re- 
port.) Mother  Earth  4:146-50  July,  1909 
TS 

Protest    for    suppression    of    Emma    Goldman. 
Reports  speakers   and   letters. 

Suppression  of  free  speech  in  New  York 
and   New  Jersey,   n.p.    1909  27p 

Deals  with  suppression  of  Emma  Goldman. 

Ghis,  Paul 
L'anarchisme    aux    Etats-Unis.    Paris,    A. 
Colin    1903 
HCL 

[Goldman,  Emma] 

[British   freedom   of  speech.]    [Editorial] 
Mother  Earth  5:214-16  Sept,  1910 
TS 

Tells    of   imprisonment    of    Herr   Johan    Most, 
Bourtsev,  Guy  Alfred,  Vinayaka  D.   Savarkar. 

Conviction  of  the  Magon  brothers.  [Edi- 
torial]   Mother  Earth  7:156  July,   1912 
TS 

The  Magon   brothers  were  industrial   agitators 
favoring    Mexican    revolution. 

[Free     speech     in      Arden.]      [Editorial] 
Mother  Earth  6:166  Aug,   1911 


TS 


Deals  with  suppression  of  an  anarchist  at 
Single  tax  colony.  See  also  The  Public  Aug.  ii, 
igii. 
[Mother  Earth  is  in  receipt  of  a  tele- 
gram from  Los  Angeles  to  the  effect 
that  Ricardo  Flores  Magon  and  Enrique 
Flores  Magon  have  been  arrested.] 
Mother  Earth  11:419-21  March,  1916 
TS 

Editorial  deals  with  arrest  of  editors  of  El 
Regeneracion,  for  advocating  revolution  in 
Mexico. 

[Our  comrades,  the  Brothers  Magon,  will 
go  to  trial  in  Los  Angeles,  l^Iay  31st.] 
[Editorial]  Mother  Earth  11 :501-2  June, 
1916 
TS 

Deals  with  Magon  brothers  arrest  for  advo- 
cating   revolution    in    Mexico. 


Our    fight.    Mother    Earth    4:187-9    Aug, 
1909 
TS 

Tells   of  enlarged   liberality   of   N.Y.   police. 
[Suppression  of  Volne  Listy.]   [Editorial] 
Mother  Earth   11:532-3  July,   1916 
TS 

Recounts  postal  suppression  of  this  Bohemian 
anarchist   paper. 

— and   Berkman,   Alexander 

Deportation,    its    meaning    and    menace; 

last  message  to  the  people  of  America. 

M.    E.    Fitzgerald,    Ellis    Island,    JNew 

York   Dec,   1919  32p 
TS 

General  discussion  of  causes  and  consequences 
of  sending  "Soviet  Ark"  to  Russia  loaded  with 
radical    deportees. 

A  fragment  of  the  prison  experience  of 
Emma  Goldman  and  Alexander  Berk- 
man  in  the  state  prison  at  Jefferson 
City,  Mo.,  and  the  United  States  pen- 
itentiary at  Atlanta,  Ga.,  February  1918- 
October  1919.  New  York,  Stella  Comyn 
[1919]   25p 

Convicted  because  of  opposition  to  the  war, 
these  anarchists  describe  their  prison  treatment, 
and  the  discriminations  made  against  intel- 
lectual offenders.  Berkman's  article  was  first 
published  in  The  Constitution,  Atlanta,  Ga., 
Oct.    I,    iQig- 

Kelly,  Harry,  and  Havel,  Hyppolite 

Mother  Earth   (San  Diego  edition).  8:99- 
137  June,   1912 
TS 

Gives  incidents  in  development  of  free  speech 
fight  in  San  Diego.  For  more  complete  story 
see:    Theo.    Schroeder. 

Hapgood,    Hutchins 

Fire  and  revolution.  New  York,  Free 
speech  league  1912  16p 

Argues  for  expediency  of  permitting  most 
violent    opinions. 

Harvey,    Alexander 

The  Bang.  vlO  no.  9,  May  22,  1916 

Whole  number  of  eight  pages  devoted  to  free 
speech. 

Heaford,  William 

Restoration  of  Ferrer's  books.  Freethink- 
er (London)   32:250-1  April  21,  1912 

TS 

Deals  with  the  unsuccessful  effort  to  have 
the  books  of  Francisco  Ferrer  destroyed.  This 
occurred  after  the  author  was  shot  by  official 
order. 

Henderson,   Gerard 
What  is  left  of  free  speech.  New  Republic 
21:50-2   Dec   17,    1919 
TS 

Criticises  the  opinion  of  United  States  Supreme 
court  in  the  Abrams  case  where  friends  of 
Soviet  Russia  were  given  20  years  in  jail  for 
opposing   American    intervention. 

Herve,    Gustave 

Mes  crimes;  ou,  Onze  ans  de  prison  pour 
delits   de   prcsse;   modeste   contribution 
a    I'histoire    de   la   liberte    de    la   presse 
sous  la  3'  republique.  Paris  n.d.  381p 
TS 


96 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Hill,  Frederick  Trevor 

Decisive  battles  of  the  law:  the  Chicago 
anarchists'  case.  Harper's  Magazine  114: 
889-900 
TS 

For  an  understanding  of  how  prejudice  against 
their  opinions  was  main  factor  inducing  a  con- 
viction for  murder  one  must  read  Gov  John  P. 
Altgclt's    pardoning    message. 

Imprisonment  of  John  Turner;  free  speech 
and  the  new  alien  law.  New  York,  Free 
speech  league  1903  4p;  Same.  Vincland 
Independent    Dec    18,    1903 

TS 

Deals    with    anti-anarchist    immigration    law. 

In  defence  of  free  speech;  five  essays  from 
the  Arena  and  written  by  B.  O.  Flower, 
Rev  Eliot  White,  Louis  F.  Post  and 
Theodore  Schroeder.  n.t.p.  New  York, 
Free    speech   league    1908   24p 

NY   TS 

Inglis,  Agnes 

Free  speech  on  the  campus  of  Ann  Arbor. 
Mother    Earth    11:743-5   Jan,    1917 
TS 

University  of  Michigan  denies  Emma  Gold- 
man use  of  campus  for  lecture  on  Russian  liter- 
ature. 

[International   notes.]    Mother   Earth   6-2^1 

Sept,  1911 
TS 

Quotes  passages  held  blasphemous  and  tells 
of  other  _  suppressions  of  radical  periodicals  in 
Prussia,  including  arrest  and  acquittal  for  selling 
Richard   Wagner's  Die  neue  revolution. 

Kelly,   H[arry] 

American   liberty.   Mother   Earth   3:127-32 
May,   1908 
TS 

Tells  of  suppression  of  unemploved  demonstra- 
tions;   La    Questione    Sociale    of   Patterson,    N.J. 

Kuh,  Edwin  J. 

Right   to    disbelieve.    New    York,    Mother 
Earth    publishing   association    1910    16p 
TS 

Mostly   historical. 

McCabe,  Joseph,   1867- 

Martyrdom  of  Ferrer,  being  a  true  ac- 
count of  his  life  and  work.  London, 
Watts  &  CO.  1909  96p 

LC  TS 

Movement   for   free    speech.    Mother    Earth 

4:103-7  June,    1909 
TS 

Republishes  numerous  newspaper  items  on 
suppression    of    Emma    Goldman. 

Mylius,   Edward   F. 

United  States  Circuit  court  of  appeals, 
for  the  second  district  [United  States 
ex  rel  Edward  F.  Mylius,  appellee,  vs 
Byron  H.  Uhl,  acting  commissioner  of 
immigration,  appellant. 1  Transcript  of 
record,  n.p.  [1913]  lllp 
TS 

For  conviction  of  libeling  King  George  of 
England  unsuccessful  effort  was  made  to  de- 
port M.  See  also:  Mylius  under  heading  Sedi- 
tion. 


Nettlau,  Max 

Bibliographic     de     I'anarchie.     Bruxelles, 
Bibliotheque    des    "Temps    nouveraux" 
[1897]    xi,294p 
HCL 

Includes    free    speech    items. 

Off  with  her  head.  Nation  108:18  Jan  4, 
1919 

Tells  of  arrest  of  Theodora  Pollock  in  Sacra- 
mento for  having  a  copy  of  Solidarity  in  her 
possession,  and  an  unpublished  poem  of  hers 
on   Peace,    written   before   the    war. 

Post,  Louis  F.,  and  others 

In  defense  of  free  speech;  five  essays 
from  the  Arena,  and  written  by  B.  O. 
Flower,  Rev  Eliot  White,  Louis  F. 
Post  and  Theodore  Schroeder.  New 
York,  Free  speech  league  1908  24p 
TS 

Landmarks   of   liberty.    Public   publishing 
CO.    1901    33p 
TS 

Reprint  from  The  Public,  September  28,   190 1. 
Deals   with   demand  for  suppressing  anarchists 
and    industrial    agitators. 

Public  meetings  and  the  police  in  New 
York.  Charities  and  the  Commons  20: 
1-3  April  4,   1908 

Redbeard,    Ragnar 

Might   is   right:    or.    The    survival    of   the 
fittest.   5th   ed    London,   W.  J.   Robbins 
&  CO.  1910 
TS 

Suppressed  by  post  office  department,  and  by 
State    of    Washington. 

Reitman,  Benjamin  L, 

Fight   for    free    speech    (correspondence.) 
Mother   Earth   3:72-5   April,   1908 
TS 

Suppression     of     Emma     Goldman     by     Chief 
Shippy   of   Chicago  police. 
Free    speech    fight.    Mother    Earth    5:23-8 
March,    1910 
TS 

Tells  of  persecutions  of  Emma  Goldman 
anarchist;  parade  of  Chicago  unemployed;  Harry 
Avorbach's  attempted  assassination  of  Chief  of 
Police  Shippy;  also  bomb  throwing  at  N.Y.  police. 
Cites  socialist  approval  of  the  suppression  of 
anarchists. 

San  , Diego  again.     Mother  Ea  th  8:111-13 
June,  1913 
TS 

Tells  of  deportation  of  Reitman  and  Gold- 
man during  San  Diego  free  speech  fight.  For 
more   see:    T.    Schroeder's   account. 

Roe,  Gilbert  Emstein,   1865- 

Reasonable  restrictions  upon  the  free- 
dom of  assemblage;  reprinted  from  pub- 
lications of  the  American  sociological 
society,  v9  1914.  New  York,  Free  speech 
league   1915   7p 

uses 

S.,  E. 

Capitalist  outrages  in  San  Diego.  Freedom 
(London)   26:46  June,   1912 
TS 

Tells  of  the  anarchist  participation  in  free 
speech  fight.  See  for  full  account  Schroeder,  T. 
Free   speech   for   radicals.    Enl.    Ed. 


FREE  SPEECH 


97 


Salter,  William  Mackintire 

America's  compact  with  despotism  in 
Russia;  a  lecture  before  the  Society  for 
ethical  culture  of  Philadelphia,  Sunday, 
March  26,  1893.  Ethical  Addresses  16: 
136  Jan,  1909 
Freedom  of  thought  and  speech.  Chicago 

1892  29p 
What   shall    we    do    with    the    anarchists? 
a  lecture  before  the  Society  for  ethical 
culture  of  Chicago,  Oct  23,  [1887]   with 
editorial    criticism    from    the     Chicago 
News  and  Mr  Salter's  replies.  Chicago 
1887  25p 
HCL 
Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,   1864- 

Criminal  anarchy  law  on  suppressing  the 
advocacy  of  crime.  New  York,  Mother 
Earth  publishing  co.  1907  16p 
TS 

Free  speech  case  of  Jay  Fox.  New  York, 
Free  speech  league  1912  12p 
TS 

Free    speech    for   radicals,    enl    ed    River- 
side,   Conn.,    Published    for    the    Free 
speech  league   1916  206p 
TS 

Free    speech    for    radicals;    seven    essays. 

New  York,  Free  speech  league  1912  81p 

TS 

Lawless    suppression    of    free    speech    in 

New  York.   Arena  39:694-9  June.   1908 

TS 

On    suppressing    the    advocacy   of   crime. 
Mother   Earth    1:7-18  Jan,    1907 
TS 

Our  progressive  despotism.  Mother  Earth 
3:80-4   April,    1908 
TS 

Our  vanishing  liberty  of  the  press.  Arena 
36:617-21  Dec,  1906 
TS 

Story  of  the  San  Diego  [Cal.l  free  speech 
f^ght.    New    York    Call    7:9,    14,    10,    11 
March   15,  22,  29,  April  5,   1914 
TS 

Unanswered  letter   to    Gen   Theodore   A. 
Bingham,  police  commissioner  of  New 
York  City.  Mother  Earth  2:181-3  June, 
1907 
TS 
— and  others 

In    defence    of    free    speech;    five    essays 
from  the  Arena.  New  York,  Free  speech 
league   [1908]  24p 
TS 

Seuflert.   Herman 

Anarchismus    und    strafrccht.    Berlin,    O. 
Liebmann   1899 
HCL 

Shall   free    thought   be   throttled?    Regcncr- 

aci6n  April  1,  1916 
TS 

Tells  of  the  arrest  of  the  Magon  brothers 
and  republishes  the  incriminating  articles.  De- 
fendants were  refugees  from  Mexico,  encourag- 
ing the  revolution  against  the  Carranza  govern- 
ment. 


Steffens,  Joseph  Linccln,  1?66- 

Free  speech  with  and  without.  Harper's 
Weekly  58:10-11    May  9,   1914 

Reprinted   for    the    Free    sincch    league. 

Deals  with  unemploj  meiu  meeting  under  dif- 
ferent police  commissioners.  Suppression  pro- 
duced   riot.      Freedom    left  all   peaceable. 

,  .  .  Suppression  of  free  speech  in  New 
York  and  in  New  Jersey  .  .  .  together 
with  the  full  text  of  the  suppressed 
lecture  by  Emma  Goldman  and  the  ad- 
dresses by  Leonard  Abbott  and  Alden 
Freeman  .  .  .  [East  Orange,  N.J.,  East 
Orange   Record  print   1909]   28p 

Y 

[Suppression  of  news.]  [Editorial]  Mother 
Earth  5:67   May,   1910 

TS 

Deals  with  suppression  and  distortion  of  news 
effecting   labor   movements    and    agitators. 

The  Torch;  a  revolutionary  journal  of  an- 
archist-communism. London   [1894-?] 

HCL 

Turner,  John 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  United  States, 
October  term,  1903.  [United  States  ex 
rel.  John  Turner,  vs.  William  Williams, 
commissioner,  etc.]  Brief  and  argument 
of  appellant  [by]  Clarence  S.  Darrow, 
Edgar  L.  Masters.  Chicago.  H.  C.  Dar- 
row,  printer    [1904]    I87p 

TS 

Supreme  court  of  the  United  States.  Oct- 
ober term,  1903.  [The  United  States 
ex  rcl.  John  Turner,  appellant,  vs.  Wil- 
liam Williams.  United  States  commis- 
sioner of  immigration  for  the  port  of 
New  York]  Transcript  of  record. 
Washington.  D.C.,  Judd  &  Detweiler, 
printers  1904  22p 

TS 

United  States.  Justice,  Department  of 
Transmission  through  the  mails  of  anar- 
chistic publications.  Message  from  the 
president  of  the  United  States,  trans- 
mitting a  communication  from  the  at- 
torney-general .  .  .  (60th  Cong.  1st  sess. 
S.  doc.  426")  Washington  [Government 
printing  office]   1908  lip 

HCL  TS 

Relates  to  exclusion  of  anarchist  literature 
from    mails.  ,    ,  ,■     ,    „ 

See  Schroeder,  T.     "Free  speech  for  radicals, 
P76-8. 

[Waisbrooker,  Lois,  and  Penhallow,  Mattie 
D.l 

Our   new   contest.    Discontent  4:1    March 
26,  1902 
TS 

Gives  an  account  of  arrest  for  an  article 
"The  awful  fate  of  a  fallen  woman  published 
in:  Clothed  in  the  Sun.  (Home.  Wash.)  Dec. 
tool.  Penhallow  was  postmistress  at  Home, 
Wash,    and    arrested    for    forwarding    the    paper. 

Walker,  Edwin  Cox,  1849- 

Cramers  of  furnaces  and  sitters  on  safe- 
ty valves.  Truth  Seeker  33:727-8 
'  Discusses  suppression  of  memorial  meeting 
for  Czolgosz,  the  assassin  of  President  Mc- 
Kinley. 
Liberty  vs  assassination.  New  York,  The 
author  [n.d.  1905?]  16p 


98 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Way   to    unconstitute    authority.    New    Re- 
public 21:306-8  Feb  11,  1920 

Discusses  charges  and  vindication  of  Rev 
Percy  Grant  for  likening  deported  radicals  to 
Pilgrim    fathers. 

Weinberger,   Harry 

Is  it  unprofessional  for  a  lawyer  to   de- 
fend radicals  in  court?  [n.d.  1920]  4p 
TS 

Tells  of  service  to  liberty,  and  landlords 
violation    of    lease    in    consequence    thereof. 

Wells,   Herbert   George 

Future  in  America;  a  search  after  real- 
ities. New  York,  Harper  &  brothers 
1906 

White,    Eliot 

Denial  of  free   speech  in   Massachusetts: 
a  personal  statement.  Arena  39:699-701 
June,   1908 
Y 
White,  Eliot,  and  others 

In  defence  of  free  speech;  five  essays 
from  the  Arena,  and  written  by  B.  O. 
Flower,  Rev  Elliot  White,  Louis  F. 
Post  and  Theodore  Schroeder.  New 
York,   Free   speech  league   1908  24p 

Recent  episode  in  the  battle  against  Rus- 
sianization  of  America.  Twentieth  Cen- 
tury Dec,   1909 

Wilgus,   William   H. 

Appeals  for  sane  democracy.  Springfield, 
III.,   Illinois  state  register  1919 

Voice  of  the  people,  defends  utmost  of  free 
speech    for    radicals. 

Bolshevists  and  Communists 

Abrams,  Jacob;  Lipman,  Samuel;  Lachow- 
sky,  Hyman;  and  S  timer,  MoUie 

Twenty  years  in  prison.  New  York,  Po- 
litical prisoners  defense  and  relief  com. 
1919  32p 

The  gist  of  the  offense  was  these  words: 
"The  Russian  revolution  calls  to  the  workers 
of  the  world  for  help."  See  also  under:  Anar- 
chists. 

At  last   the   red   terror.   Dial  67:205-6  Sept 
6.  1919 

Gives  an  account  of  hysterical  attitude  toward 
suspected    radicalism    of    Bolshevist    tendencies. 

[Censorship  in  Canada.]  [Editorial]  Mother 

Earth    5:275-7    Nov,    1910 
TS 

Tells  of  exclusion  of  radical  literature,  and 
deportation     to     Russia     of     Savva     Federenko 

Cobb,   Frank   I. 

Press   and  public   opinion.   New   Republic 
22:144-7    Dec   31,    1919 
TS 

A  good  discussion  especially  of  censorship 
against  agitators  for  Soviet  form  of  govern- 
ment. 

Communist    trial.    New    Republic    23:323-24 

Aug   18,   1920 
TS 

A    brief    critical    review. 

Dell,  Floyd 

Story  of  the  trial.  Liberator  1:2-18  June, 
1918 

Trial  of  Masses  editors  for  opposition  to  war. 
Max    Eastman's    speech    in    his    own    defense. 


Enforce  the  law  against  the  reds.  Good- 
win's Weekly  May  10,  1919 

A  rabid  tirade  against  radical  miners  who  de- 
cided to  strike  at  Park  City,  Utah,  ar.d  a  de- 
mand for  punishment  on  the  advocacy  of  their 
radicalism.      One    page. 

England  is  arresting  radicals;  Sylvia  Pank- 
hurst  and  Col  Molone,  M.P.  get  cell 
term  for  red  support.  New  York  Sun 
88:22  Jan  4,   1921 

TS 

Ewer,  W.  N. 

League  of  secret  police.  Dial  67:209-10 
Sept  6,    1919 

TS 

Shows  number  of  cases  of  international  secret 
cooperation    to    suppress    Bolshevist    propaganda. 

Flowers.  Sidney 

Religion     injected     into     "The     Dugout" 
case.  Crucible  3:  [2]  May  16,  1920 
TS 

Tells  how  in  second  trial  of  Flowers  effort 
was  made  to  prejudice  jury  against  him  be- 
cause of  irreligious  articles  published  in  his 
paper. 

Goldman,   Emma 

Ellis  Island:   a  protest.   Pearson's   Maga- 
zine 45:890-2  May,  1920 
TS 

Describes  abuses  heaped  upon  radicals  being 
deported. 

Howe,  Frederick  C. 

Lynch  law  and  the  immigrant  alien.  Re- 
printed for  the  Peoples  of  America 
Society   [1920]    8p 

TS 

From  The  Nation.  Ex  commissioner  of  Im- 
migration portrays  the  lawless  outrages  which 
accompany  deportations  often  for  mere  sus- 
picion   of    holding    unpopular    opinions. 

Immoral  right  to  free  speech.  Literary  Di- 
gest 62:45-6  July  5,  1919 

Issue  of  free  speech.  Review  1:634-5  Dec 
6,  1919 

Long  editorial  approval  of  opposition  of  New 
Republic  to  proposed  enlarging  of  war  censor- 
ship for   peace  time. 

License  of  the  tongue.  Public  22:258-9 
March  15,  1919 

Lovett,  Robert  Morss 

Trial  of  the  Communists.  Nation  51:185- 
86  Aug  14,  1920 

Critical  review  of  trial  of  :;o  members  of 
Communist   Labor   Party   at    Chicago. 

Magon,  Ricardo  Flores,  and  others 

Land    and    liberty;     Mexico's    battle    for 
economic   freedom.    Los    Angeles,    Cal., 
Mexican    liberal    party   n.d.    [1913]    64p 
TS 

Contains  a  few  pages  (55-60)  only  on  free 
speech  for  industrial  agitators. 

Magon  brothers  arrested  again.  New  Re- 
view 4:168  May,   1916  . 

Magons  were  promoting  revolt  in  Mexico  by 
agitation   in   U.S. 

Minor,    Robert  o  90  •jo 

I   got  arrested  a  little.   Liberator  Z:ZiS-M 
Dec,    1919 
TS 

Gives  account  of  arrest  in  France  for  sup- 
posed treason  as  Bolshevist  agitator,  and  much 
detail    on    treatment    of    such    offenders. 


FREE  SPEECH 


99 


Myers,   Gustavus 

It    all    depends.    Review    1:261-4    Aug    2, 

1919 
New   York's   union   workers   start  fight   on 

Bolshevism   and   all   forms   of  anarchy. 

New  York  Evening  World  59:1   March 

31,  1919 
TS 

Laborers    of    radical    opinions    to    be    excluded 

from    the   American    Federation    of    Labor. 

On  behalf  of  Louis  F.  Post.  New  Republic 

22:264-66  April  28,   1920 
TS 

As  assistant  secretary  of  labor,  Post  was 
investigated  by  a  congressional  committee  for 
having  dealt  too  leniently  with  Bolshevists  ar- 
rested for  deportation.  This  article  exhibits 
the  evil  practices  which  justified  him. 

"Other    heresies."    New    Republic    18:330-1 

April   12,   1919 
TS 

School  board  of  Washington,  D.C.,  prohibits 
teachers  from  discussing  "Bolshevism;  league 
of     nations,    and    other    heresies." 

Poole,  Ernest 

Sitting     editor     of     the     Russian     police. 
World  To-day  10:509-10  May,  1906 

Red  editor  is  held  for  attack  on  [victory 
war]  loan;  arrest  of  Jacob  Itzickson, 
of  Freedom,  said  to  herald  drive  on 
Bolshevik  press.  New  York  Tribune 
Mav  13,   1919  p8 

TS 

Reed,  John 

About  the  second  Masses  trial.  Liberator 
1:36-8  Dec,  1918 
TS 

Free  speech.  Masses  9:23  July,  1917 
TS 

Release  of  reds  up  to  Post.  New  York  Eve- 
ning Sun  34:4  April  28,   1920 

Deals  with  radicals  who  were  held  to  be 
not  deportable  and  investigation  of  this  "exces- 
sive" leniency.     See:  On  behalf  of  Louis  F.  Post. 

Sentenced  to  twenty  years  prison.  New 
York,  Published  by  the  Political  pris- 
oners defense  and  relief  committee 
[1919]  32p 

Case  o-f  U.S.  v.  Jacob  Abrams,  Samuel  Lip- 
man,  Hyman  Lachowsky,  MoUie  Stimer.  Jacob 
Schwartz  died  before  the  trial.  These  were 
sentenced  for  twenty  years  for  distributing  a 
circular,  the  essence  of  which  was  these  words: 
"Will  you  allow  the  Russian  revolution  to  be 
crushed?  .  .  .  The  Russian  revolution  calls  to 
the  workers  of  the  world  for  help."  Also 
gives  account  of  alleged  "third  degree"  by  the 
police,    and   some    facts    about    the    trial. 

Simons,  H.  Austin 

Guiltv:    the    general    strike.    Liberator    3: 
12-15   Sept,    1920 
TS 

Tells  of  conviction  of  14  Communists  for 
conspiracy  to  overthrow  the  government  by 
means    of   a   general    strike. 

Sylvia  Pankhurst.  defiant,  goes  to  iail. 
[From  the  London  Daily  Herald] 
Gales  International  Monthlv  (Mexico 
City)   4:11    Dec,   1920 

TS 

Good  account  of  her  defense  by  quotations. 
Penalized  articl<^s  had  been  published  in:  Work- 
er's   Dreadnought. 


Taylor,   Graham 

Bolshevism    of    Professor    Ward.    Survey 
41:920-1    March   29,    1919 

Teachers  and  bolshevism;  case  of  Miss 
Wood  suspended  by  Washington  Dis- 
trict board  will  be  carried  by  unions 
into  federal  court.  New  York  Times 
April  21,  1919 

TS 

Long  account  of  case  of  Miss  Alice  Wood 
in    District    of   Columbia. 

This  guy  Pythagoras.  Freeman   1 :282  June 

2.   1920 
TS 

Amusing  account  of  ignorance  of  U.S.  secret 
service,  exhibited  during  examination  of  Kar- 
nauch  arrested  as  radical.  From:  Americanskja 
Izvestia. 

Warren,  Maude  Radford 

Free  speech,  Bolshevist  style.  New  York 
Times   [Magazine  section]  Jan  30,  1921 
TS 

A  report  of  Bolshevist  suppression  of  free 
speech. 

Fraud 

Applying  to  independent  fraudulent  trans- 
actions statute  forbidding  use  of  mails 
in  schemes  to  defraud.  [Bettman  v. 
United  States,  Federal  Reporter  224: 
819]  Central  Law  Journal  81:271-2  Oct 
15,   1915 

ILP  "16 

Criminal  law,  use  of  mails  to  defraud.  [Bett- 
man v.  U.  S.  Federal  Reporter  224:819] 
University  of  Pennsylvania  Law  Re- 
view 64:322  Jan,   1916 

ILP  '17 

Morse,    Sidney 

Siege    of    University    City;    the    Dreyfus 
case   of  America.   St   Louis,   University 
city  publishing  co.    1912   772p 
TS 

Hostile  to  postal  censorship  over  business 
methods   of   mail   service   users. 

New,  John  Fair 

In  the  United  States  circuit  court  of  ap- 
peals: ninth  judicial  district.  [John 
Fair  New.  plaintiff  in  error,  vs.  United 
States  of  America,  defendants  in  error.] 
Opening  brief  of  plaintiff  in  error,  n.p., 
n.d.  56p 

The  alleged  fraudulent  representations  about 
immortality  were  in  the  indictment  alleged  also 
to   be   blasphemous. 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  United 
States.  [John  Fair  New,  petitioner,  vs. 
United  States  of  America,  respondent.] 
Ex  parte  petition  and  brief  in  forma 
pauperis,  n.p.,  n.d.  22p 

Convicted  for  making  "fraudulent"  repre- 
sentation,   about    immortality,   by   mail. 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  United 
States.  [John  Fair  New,  petitioner,  vs. 
United  States  of  .Xmcrica.  respondent.] 
Petition  and  brief  to  the  Supreme  court 
of  the  L^nited  States,  n.p..  n.d.  23p 

Convicted  of  fraudulent  use  of  mails  on 
claim    of    having    attained   personal    physical    im- 


100 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


New,   J.    F. — Continued 

mortality  and  other  "supernatural"  qualities. 
The  indictment  denounces  him  as  "Impostcr 
and  heretic,  a  seeker  of  vain  glory."  His  books 
used  in  evidence  are:  "Newology  or  the  New 
Bible";  and  "New  Life  Theology."  For  only 
similar  case  see:  Asgill,  John. 
Supreme  court  of  the  United  States;  Oc- 
tober term,  1917.  [John  Fair  New,  peti- 
tioner, vs.  The  United  States  of  Amer- 
ica.] Washington,  Judd  &  Detweiler 
1918    171p 

Post,  Louis  F. 

Could  a  better  system  for  graft  be  de- 
vised?  1905  20p 

Growing  power  of  the  postal  censorship. 
Public  8:778  Oct  7,  1905 
TS 

Deals    with    E.    G.    Lewis    case.      See    Morse, 
Sidney    "The    siege    of    University    City." 
Our    advancing    postal    censorship,    n.p., 
n.d.   28p 
TS 

Reprinted  from  the  Public,  August  12,   1905. 

Rapier,  John  L. 

Freedom  of  the  press;  in  the  Supreme 
court  of  the  United  States,  ex  parte 
in  the  matter  of  John  L.  Rapier,  upon 
a  petition  for  writs  of  habeas  corpus 
and  certiorari,  against  the  constitution- 
ality of  the  recent  act  of  congress  gen- 
erally known  as  the  Anti-lottery  law. 
n.p  ,   n.d.  48p 

Deals  with  postal  prohibition  of  lottery  infor- 
mation. For  decision  see.  United  States  Reports 
143:110. 

Reid,   Hugh 

What's    the    matter   with   the   post   ofifice. 
Public  22:1041-3 
TS 

Reid,  Walter  E. 

In  prison!  Dr  W.  E.  Reid  convicted.  .  .  . 
Olive    Branch    15:1-8   March-June,    1890 

TS 

Dr  Reid  was  imprisoned  because  he  "falsely 
and  fraudently  pretended  that  he  could  obtain 
communication  from  spirit  land." 

Reynolds,  John   N. 

A    Kansas    hell;    or,    Life   in    the    Kansas 

penitentiary,   Atchison,   Kan.,   The    Bee 

publishing  co.  1889  255p 
LC  TS 

Convicted  under  postal  censorship  of  fraud. 
Deals  mostly  with  prison  life  and  not  censor- 
ship. 

Thomas,  John  L[ilbum]    1833- 

Lotteries,    frauds    and    obscenity    in    the 

mails.    Columbia,   Mo.,   Press   of   E.   W. 

Stephens    1900   xviii,   358p 
NY  TS 

Abstracts  all  legal  decisions  on  press  censor- 
ship   and    reproduces    statutes. 

Use  pf  mails  to  defraud,  what  constitutes 
"Scheme  or  artifice."  [Bettman  v.  Uni- 
ted States,  Federal  Reporter  224:819] 
Harvard  Law  Review  29:340  Jan,   1916 

ILP  '17 


Industrial  Workers  of  the  World 

Chapin,   Ralph 

Centralia   conspiracy,   n.p.  n.d.    [1920]   SOp 
Gives    much    information    on    lawless    persecu- 
tion   of    economic    radicals    leading    up    to    the 
Centralia,    Wash,    assassinations. 

Coleman,   B.    S. 

L    W.    W.    and    the    law;    the    result    of 

Everett's  bloody  Sunday.  Sunset  39:35 

July,    1917 
RG  '17 
Coimtry-wide    free    speech    fights.    Mother 

Earth    7:46-8   April,    1912 
TS 

Asks  help  of  men  and  money  especially  for 
San  Diego  free  speech  fight  for  account  of 
which  see:  Schroeder,  T.  Story  of  San  Diego 
free   speech   fight. 

Dell,   Floyd 

Invincible  I.  W.  W.  Liberator  2:9-11  May, 
1919 

Gives  information  of  methods  used  in  effort 
to  deport  I.  W.  W.   for  their  opinions. 

Fox,   Jay 

Persecution   at   Home.   Agitator   Sept    15, 
1911 
TS 

Republished  from:  Industrial  Worker  (Spo- 
kane, Wash.)  upholding  Fox's  "disrespect  for 
law"    for    which    he    was    arrested. 

[Free  speech  in  Fresno.]  [Editorial]  Mother 

Earth  5:273-5  Nov,  1910 
TS 

Fragment  of  Fresno,  Cal.  free  speech  fight 
with  Industrial  Workers  of  World  involving  also 
right    of    asylum. 

Free  speech  in   Paterson.   Outlook   111:692- 

3  Nov  24,  1915 
RG  '15 

George,    Harrison 

The  I.  W.  W.  trial.  Chicago,  I.  W.  W. 
pub.  bu.  n.d.  208p 

Trial  for  conspiracy  to  impair  military  effi- 
ciency, and  evidence  based  mainly  on  radical 
pre-war    publications. 

Harvey,    Alexander 

The   Bang   (magazine).  v9  no.  3,   Oct  11, 
1915 
TS 

Devoted  mainly  to  free  speech  controversy 
at  Paterson,  N.J.  Discusses  in  short  paragraphs 
and  without  title  free  speech  and  right  of  as- 
sembly in  industrial  disputes. 

[Haywood,  William   D.] 

Big  demonstration  in  Boston;  Bill  Hay- 
wood arrested.  Industrial  Worker  Sept 
26,   1912 

TS 

Long  account  sympathetic  with  Haywood  of  cir- 
cumstances surrounding  arrest  on  Boston  Com- 
mon. 
Evidence  and  cross  examination  of  Wil- 
liam D.  Haywood.  [Chicago,  I.  W.  W. 
pub.  bu.]   n.d.  312p 

Evidence  of  one  defendant  for  benefit  of  all, 
on  trial  for  conspiracy  to  impair  military  effi- 
ciency. 
Haywood  sues  out  two  writs;  will  re- 
main in  jail,  however,  until  habeas 
corpus  is  decided  Saturday.  New  York 
Globe  April  1,  1913 
TS 


FREE  SPEECH 


101 


Haywood's  arrest  part  of  plan  to  murder 
workers;  bosses  determined  to  crush 
Industrial  Workers  of  the  World,  re- 
sort to  murder  and  dynamite  outrages 
to  attain  end.  Free  Press  Sept  21,  1912 
TS 

A  socialist  viewpoint  on  arrest  during  silk 
workers    strike    at    Patcrson,    N.J. 

In  the  District  court  of  the  United  States, 
northern  district  of  Illinois,  eastern 
division.  [The  United  States  of  Amer- 
ica, vs.  William  D.  Haywood,  et  al.] 
Indictment  on  sections  6,  19  and  Zl  of 
the  criminal  code  of  the  United  States, 
and  section  4  of  the  Espionage  act  of 
June  15,  1917.  Chicago,  I.  W.  W.  pub. 
bu.    [1917]    32p 

Indictment  of  five  counts  against  about  175 
I.  W.  W.'s   for    anti-war   conspiracy. 

Minturn  discharges  Haywood  and  Lessig 
from  Patterson  jail;  police  case  fails. 
New   York   Call  April   6.   1913 

Long  account  includes  Judge  Minturn's  de- 
cission  releasing  Haywood  under  arrest  in  Pater- 
son,   N.J. 

Opening  statement  of  Geo.  F.  Vandcr- 
veer  in  the  case  of  the  U.S.A.  vs.  Wm. 
D.  Haywood,  et  al.  Chicago,  I.W.  W. 
pub.  bu.   1918  102p 

On  indictments  for  conspiracy  to  impair  mil- 
itary efficiency.  Speaker  was  attorney  for 
I.  W.  W.'s. 

Syndicalism.  Nashville  Democrat  Sept  17, 
1912 
TS 

Editorial  on  Haywood's  arrest  on  Boston  Com- 
mon. 

Testimony  of  Mr  William   D.   Haywood. 
(In:    Industrial    Relations:    final    report 
and  testimony  11:10569-99) 
TS 

Recounts  the  hazzard  and  penalties  for  being 
an    industrial    agitator. 

Worst   kind    of  an   anarchist.    New    York 
Globe   April   7,    1913 
TS 

Editorial  on  arrest  of  Haywood  during  Pater- 
son  N.J.  strike  of  silk  workers.  Favors  free 
speech. 

Hill,  Mary  Anderson 

Free    speech    fight    at    San    Diego.    Sur- 
vey 28:192-4   May  4,    1912 
RG  '10-14 

I.  W.  W.  newspaper  outlaw  laughs  at  U.S. 
authorities.  The  Rebel  Worker  camou- 
flaged, circulates  and  berates  the  presi- 
dent. New  York  Evening  World  59:15 
March    28,    1919 

Tells  of  suppression,  secret  circulation  and 
contents   of    Rebel    Worker. 

Jackson,   John 

A  Federal  Judge  speaks  up.  New  Re- 
public 22:135  March  31,  1920 

Commends  and  quotes  U.S.  Judge  Bourquin 
of  Montana  in  releasing  John  Jackson  and  crit- 
icizing   government    for    deportation    raids. 

Lawful!  The  gruesome  story  of  American 
terrorism;  lest  we  forget.  One  Big 
Union   Monthly  2:1-21    March,    1920 

TS 

This  is  a  list  of  martyrs  to  the  cause  of  the 
I.  W.  W. 


New    Holy    office.    Public    22:546    May    24, 

1919 
TS 

Short  account  of  extraordinary  examination 
of  women  reurning  from  America  to  England, 
suspected   of  I.  W.  W.    interests. 

New  varieties  of  censorship.  Survey  43:222-4 
Dec   13,    1919 

Deals  with  suppression  of  Seattle  Union 
Record;  also  Business  Chronicle  of  Seattle. 
Involves  libel  over  I.  W.  W.  shooting  at  Cen- 
tralia,    Wash. 

Police   are   busy  with   big  stick.   Appeal   to 

Reason,   no.   1217   March  29,   1919  p3 
TS 

Tells  of  suppression  at  Kansas  City  of  meet- 
ings of  I.  W.  W.  and  of  the  Brotherhood  wel- 
fare   association. 

Possible  Patcrson.  Outlook  104:318-21  June 

14.  1913 
RG   '10-14 

Recent  American  performance  suppression 
of  freedom.  Arbitrator  3:13-14  Jan. 
1921 

Very  brief  recitals  of  cases  of  suppression  of 
free    speech. 

Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,   1864- 

Free  speech  for  radicals,  enl  ed  Riverside, 

Conn.,    Published    for    the    Free    speech 

league   1916  206p 
TS 

Ten  essays  on  liberty  of  speech  and  liberty 
of   the   press. 

Story  of  the  San  Diego  [Cal.l  free  speech 
fight.  New  York  Call  7:9,  14,  10,  11 
March    15,   22,  29  April   5,    1914 

Sheriff  disperses  I.  W.  W.  whom  Iowa 
mayor  welcomed;  city's  executive  van- 
ishes after  tar  and  feather  threat.  New 
York  Evening  W^orld  April  23,  1919 

TS 

Long    news    dispatch    from    Sioux    City. 

Short.  Wallace  Mertin,  1866- 

How   one   town  learned  a  lesson   in  free 
speech.    Survey    35:106-8    Oct    30,    1915 
RG  '15 

Since  the  armistice.  New  York.  New  York 
bureau  of  legal  advice  1919  15p 

TS 

Describes  treatment  of  conscientious  objectors 
and    the    deportation    of    I.  W.  W.    members. 

Smith,  Walker  C. 

Everett  massacre;  history  of  the  class 
struggle  in  the  lumber  industry.  Chi- 
cago,   I.W.  W^   pub.   bu.    [1918?]    302p 

Gives  extended  account  of  the  industrial  dis- 
pute and  free  speech  fight  which  led  to  the  law- 
less   killing    of    some    radicals. 

Stefifens,  Joseph   Lincoln,    1866- 

Libertv  in  the  United  States.  Mother 
Earth    8:332-4   Jan,    1914 

Address  made  in  free  speech  meeting  Pat- 
crson, N.J.     Jan.   5,    1914. 

Sterling,    Jean 
Silent    defense   in    Sacramento.    Liberator 
no.    12:15-17   Feb,    1919 

These  I.  W.  W.'s  being  tried  for  conspiracy 
under  the  Espionage  act  refused  to  speak  in 
their  own  defense  or  to  allow  an  attorney  to 
do  so.     This  is  a  fine  account  of  the  trial. 


102 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Strong,   Anna    Louise,    1885- 

Everett's   bloody   Sunday;    a   free   speech 

fight  that  led  to  a  murder  trial.  Survey 

37:475-6  Jan  27.   1917 
RG  '17 

Verdict  at  Everett.  Survey  38:160-2  May 
19.    1917 
RG  '17 

To  kill  M'Caskrin!  Startling  threat  against 
life  made  in  public  speech  at  Moline 
.  .  .  futile  attempt  of  politicians  to  get 
mayor  of  Moline  to  stifle  free  speech 
.  .  .  Rock  Island  News  4:[1]  April  6, 
1912 

TS 

Truth  about  Lawrence  [Mass.]  Forward 
(supplement)    Boston   Feb,    1919  8p 

Inlay  of  pictures  shows  mounted  police  clear- 
ing sidewalks.  Recounts  police  interference 
with    right    of    assembly    during   industrial    strike. 

Unmailable  nixies;  LW.W.  literature  from 
Canal  Station,  Chicago,  111.  One  Big 
Union   Monthly   1:54  Oct,   1919 

TS 

Reproduces  rubber  stamp  by  which  I.  W.  W. 
mail  is  excluded  from  Post  Office  without  pre- 
tense  that   it   violates   any   statutes. 

Vancouver     workers     on     trial.     Industrial 

Work  49:1   Feb  22,  1912 
TS 

Sentenced  for  street  speaking  and  vending 
radical    (I.  W.  W.)    literature. 

Verse,    Mary    Heaton 

Twenty  years.  Liberator  4:10-13  Jan,  1921 

Briefly  reviews  almost  unbelievable  outrage 
of  "justice"  in  the  conviction  of  I.  W.  W. 
leaders  for  conspiracy  under  the  Espionage  law. 

Weinstock,  Harris 

Free  speech;  to  forbid  a  man  to  speak  on 
the  assumption  that  he  will  say  some- 
thing illegal,  endangers  the  republic. 
Twentieth  Century  Magazine  6:372-8 
1912 


Why  the  masters  seek  to  gag  their  slaves. 
Labor  Defender   1:1    Dec   15.   1918 
Republished   from   the   Australian    Worker. 

Whyte,  Jack 

Another    fight    for    free    speech.    Mother 
Earth  7:31-2   March,   1912 
TS 

Letter  inviting  outsiders  to  come  to  San 
Diego  for  free  speech  fight.  See  Theodore 
Schroeder's    account. 

Woehlke,  Walter  Victor,  1879- 

I.  W.  W.  and  the  Golden  Rule.  Sunset  38: 
16-18  Feb,   1917 
RG   '17 

Woods,    Arthur 

Reasonable  restrictions  upon  freedom  of 
assemblage.  American  Sociological  So- 
ciety 9:29-45  Dec,   1914 

TS 

JO     J3uoissimiuo3     DDqod     iBjaqij     sbm     spoOyV\ 
New  York  City! 


Injunctions 

[Bruno,  Guide] 

Jurors  and  free  speech.  Pearson's  Maga- 
zine 45:651-2  Dec,  1919 
TS 

Gives  an  account  of  inquiry  and  judicial  in- 
timation that  a  believer  in  free  speech  is  dis- 
qualified from  being  a  member  of  the  grand 
jury. 

District  ef  Celumbia.  Court  of  appeals 

American  Federation  of  labor  ct  al.,  ap- 
pellants V.  The  Buck's  stove  and  range 
company.  No.  1916;  decided  March  11, 
1909.  American  Federationist  16:313-35 
1909 
Y 

Fox,  Jay 

Mass    contempt    of   court.    Agitator    Sept 
15.  1911 
TS 

"Direct  action"  is  said  to  have  induced  dis- 
solution of  an  injunction.  Judge  finally  re- 
signed  in    disgrace. 

Freedom  of  the  press  and  the  injunction. 
[Note  to  Schwartz  v.  Edrington,  Judge 
(La.)  Southern  Reporter  62:660.]  Co- 
lumbia Law  Review  13:732-4  Dec,  1913 

ILP   '13 

Gompers,   Samuel,   1850- 

Free    speech    and    the    injunction    order. 

Annals  of  the   American   Academy  36: 

255-64  Sept,   1910 
RG  '10-14 

Mote,  Carl  Henry 

Some    phases    of    injunction    legislation, 
1913-1914.    American    Political    Science 
Review  9:93-7  Feb,   1915 
ILP    15 

[Parker,  Alton  Brooks]    1852- 
Judge    Parker's    argument    in    connection 
with  the  Buck's  Stove  and  Range  com- 
pany's contempt  proceedings.  American 
Federationist  16:17-30  1909 

TS  Y 

Industrial  agitation.  See  also  Gompers  items 
and    decision    of    Supreme    court. 

Right  to  restrain  the  right  of  free  speech 
or  a  free  press  when  necessary  to  make 
effective  the  terms  of  an  injunction 
restraining  a  boycott.  Central  Law 
Journal  68:207-8  March  19.  1909 

Editorial  comment  on  Buck  Stove  and  Range 
Company  v.  American  Federation  of  Labor, 
Washington  Law  Review  36:822.  This  case 
subsequently    decided    by    U.S.    Supreme    court. 

Ringing  protests;  extracts  from  letters  and 
telegrams  received  from  people  in  all 
walks  of  life,  commenting  on  Justice 
Wright's  decision  which  sentenced 
Gompers,  Mitchell  and  Morrison  to 
prison  for  twelve,  nine  and  six  months, 
for  their  defense  of  free  speech  and 
free  press.  American  Federationist  16: 
152-67  1909 

Y 


FREE  SPEECH 


103 


Labor  Unionists 

American  federation  leaders  and  the  courts. 
Arena  41:215-18  1909 

Y 

Closed  town  remains  closed.  Survey  44:232- 
3  May  15,  1920 

For  equal  rights:  extracts  from  letters  and 
resolutions  received  from  international 
unions,  city  central  bodies,  state  feder- 
ations, local  labor  unions,  and  from 
people  in  all  walks  of  life,  commenting 
on  Justice  Wright's  decision  which 
sentenced  Gompers,  Mitchell  and  Mor- 
rison to  prison  for  their  exercise  of 
free  speech  and  free  press.  American 
Federationist    16:351-63    1909 

Gompers,   Samuel,   1850- 
As  others  view  Justice  Wright's  decision. 
American    Federationist    16:216-22    1909 

Y 

Buck's  Stove  and  range  company  injunc- 
tion modified.  American  Federationist 
16:336-45   1909 

Y 

Constitutional  liberty  imperilled.  Amer- 
ican  Federationist   16:222-5   1909 

Y 

Court      of      appeals      decision;      Justice 
Wright's    abuse    of    judicial    discretion. 
American  Federationist  20:449-60  June, 
1913 
TS 

Deals  with  injunction  and  contempt  of  court 
in   industrial   disputes. 

Free    press    and   free    speech    invaded   by 
injunction     against    the    A.     F.     of     L. 
American    Federationist    15:98-105    1908 
Y 

Government  by  a  chief  of  police;  rights 
denied    workers    of    Columbus    [Ohio]. 
American   Federationist  23:554-73  July, 
1916 
TS 

Guilty  of  contempt,  says  Justice  Wright. 
[Review]     American    Federationist    19: 
601-11  August,  1912 
TS 

Deals  with  injunction  and  contempt  in   indus- 
trial   disputes. 
Injunction   contempt  proceedings.    Amer- 
ican   Federationist    15:852-8    1908 
Y 

Justice  Wright's  decision  and  sentence 
in  the  Gompers,  Mitchell  and  Morrison 
case;  the  appeal  and  Judge  Parker's 
magnificent  argument.  American  Fed- 
erationist 16:438-56  1909 
Y 

Justice    Wright's    denial    of    free    speech 
and  free  press.  American  Federationist 
16:130-2  1909 
Y 

No  jail  for  Gompers,  Mitchell  and  Mor- 
rison— yet.    [Editorial]    American    Fed- 
erationist  18:458-61   June   or  July.    1911 
TS 

Relates  to  Supreme  court  decision  in  case 
of  contempt  for  violating  injunction  in  indus- 
trial   disputes. 


Russianized  West  Virginia;  corporate 
perversion  of  American  concepts  of 
liberty  and  justice — organized  labor  to 
the  rescue.  American  Federationist  20: 
825-35  Oct,  1913 


TS 


Using    injunction    against    right    of    assembly, 
etc.,   in  industrial   disputes. 

Van  Cleave  hales  us  to  court  for  con- 
tempt. American  Federationist  15:614- 
15  1908 

Van  Cleave's  suit  against  the  A.  F.  of  L. 
American    Federationist    14:976-8    1907 


— Mitchell,  John,  and  Morrison,  Frank 
Court  of  appeals;  District  of  Columbia; 
January  term,  1909.  Samuel  Gompers, 
John  Mitchell  and  Frank  Morrison,  ap- 
pellants, against  the  Buck  Stove  and 
Range  company,  appellee.  Memoran- 
dum for  argument  of  Alton  B.  Parker 
of  counsel  for  appellants.  New  York, 
Stillman  appellate  printing  co.   1909 

TS 

Decision  reviewed.  American  Federation- 
ist 16:132-47  1909 

Y 

Good,  E.  T. 

Labour  and  the  capitalist  press.  Spectator 
125:808-9  Dec.   18,  1920 

Graham,  Lee  H. 

In    free    America.    New    Review    2:153-5 
March,  1914 

TS 

Deals  with  industrial  agitators  during  strike 
against   Calumet  and   Heckla   Copper   Co. 

Haller,  Frederick 

New   phase    of   the   contempt   cult.    New 
Review  2:388-90  July,  1914 
TS  ,   .  .       .       . 

Deals  with  Gomper's  case  and  injunction  in 
industrial    disputes. 

Hard,   WUliam 

They  must  have  espionage.  New  Republic 
21:248-50,  22:277-8  April  21-28,   1920 
TS 

Describes  spy  system  in  industry  and  unsuc- 
cessful effort  to  get  the  government  not  to  make 
the  facts  public.  Also  lawless  suppression  of 
meetings  by  the  police. 

Justice  Wright's  decision  [in  the  case  of 
The  Buck's  Stove  and  Range  com- 
pany V.  the  American  federation  of 
labor].  American  Federationist  16:101- 
28  1909 

Y 

[Mac  Nair,  William] 
Blow  at  freedom  of  the  press,  by  Jambli- 
cus.  Alma  News  June   17-22,  1893 

TS 

Gives  full  account  of  case  and  reproduces 
criminal   matter. 

His   costly   postal    card;    Mac    Nair.    who 

wrote     it     to     Senator     McClelland,     is 

sentenced   to   four   months   and   a   $500 

fine.    New   York    Herald   June   23,    1893 

TS 

Tells  of  conviction  of  MacNair  and  repub- 
lishes criminal  matter.  MacNair  was  advocate 
of    lo-hour    labor    legislation. 


104 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Mac  Nair,  William  — Continued 

Inquisitorial  censorship;  the  Mac  Nair 
and  Comstock-McClclland  case.  Lat- 
est application  of  the  censorship  laws 
in  New  York — vindictive,  brutal  and 
unwarranted  action  taken  by  Senator 
McClelland  against  brother  Wm.  Mac 
Nair  of  D.  A.  Journal  of  the  Knights 
of  Labor  June  15.  1893 

TS 

MacNair  wrote  a  postal  card  to  Senator  after- 
ward Mayor  McClelland  disparaijing  the  latter 
for  official  speech  on  a  labor  bill.  Convicted. 
Republishes  criminal  matter.  For  latter  see 
also:  Industrial  relations,  final  report  and  testi- 
mony 11:10875.     1916. 

Mac  Nair  goes  to  jail;  punished  for  a  de- 
famatory epistle;  on  a  plea  of  guilty. 
Judge  Benedict  orders  four  months' 
imprisonment  and  a  $500  fine.  New 
York  Recorder  June  23,   1893 

TS 

Mayor  of  Sioux  city.  New  Republic  19:75 
May   17,   1919 

TS 

Deals  with  his  permit  for  holding  I.  W.  W. 
convention. 

New  varieties  of  censorship.  Survey  43:222- 

4  Dec  13.  1919 
Otis'   program   of   murder.    American    Fed- 

erationist   19:152-3   Feb,    1912 
TS 

An  editorial  from  the  American  Federation- 
ist;  containing  extracts  from  an  article  in  Cal- 
ifornia Outlook  (Dec.  30,  191 1)  which  discussed 
the  Los  Angeles  Times  editorial  (Nov.  2,  191 1) 
advocating  the  removal  (murder)  of  professional 
agitators. 

Shepard,   A.   G. 

Freedom  of  speech  in  industrial  disputes. 
Case  and  Comment  22:466-70  Nov,  1915 

Student  body  with  a  conscience.  Typo- 
graphical   Journal    46:541-2   April,    1915 

TS 

Samuel  Gompers  not  allowed  to  speak  on  the 
campus    of    the    University    of    Pennsylvania. 

Testimony  of  Mr  Joseph  Kobylak.  (In:  In- 
dustrial relations:  final  report  and 
testimony.  11:10513-34  Washington, 
D.C.,  Government  print,  ofif.  1916) 

TS 

Tells  of  extraordinary  persecution  of  an  in- 
telligent foreigner  who  aided  miners  to  assert 
their    contractual    and    legal    rights. 

"Unfair  list"  and  the  freedom  of  the  press. 
Albany   Law  Journal   70:319    Oct,    1908 

Reprinted  from  New  York  Globe.  Comment- 
ing on  the  case  of  Btick  Stove  and  Range 
Company    v.    American    Federation    of    labor. 

What    is    "anarchy"?    Voice    of    Labor    1:8 

Dec  15,  1919 
TS 

Tells  of  conviction  at  Lowell,  Mass.  of 
brothers,  Kronstanti  and  Felix  Dobrowski  for 
exhibiting  a  picture  of  the  mutilated  head  of 
Mrs  Sellin  which  appeared  in:  Voice  of  Labor, 
Oct.  15,  1919.  This  union  labor  organizer 
was  murdered  during  the  steel  strike.  Under 
picture   were   words:    A   steel-trust   victim. 

"What's    the    constitution"    in    Allegheny? 

American    Federationist    27:548-9   June, 

1920 
TS 

Account  of  arrests  at  Duquesne.  Pa.  of  union 
organizers  for  street  speaking  without  previous 
permit. 


Property 

Action  for  disparagement  of  goods.  Can- 
adian  Law  Times  30:627  July,   1910 

Buckley,  Elton  J. 

Slander-actions  for  maligning  competitive 
products.   Photo-Era  37:217  Nov,   1916 

RG  '16 

Case  of  unwarranted  literary  criticism. 
[Note]  American  Law  Review  47:915-16 
Nov,  1913 

ILP  '13 

Defamation  by  disparagement.  Canada  Law 
Journal  45:102-3   Feb   12,   1910 

Defamation  by  disparagement.  Madras  Law 
Journal   20:78-9    Feb,    1910 

English  trade  libels.  Scientific  American  86: 
61  Jan  25,   1902 

Smith,  Jeremiah 

Disparagement  of  property,  slander  of 
property.  Columbia  Law  Review  13:13- 
36   Jan,    1913 

ILP  '13 

Sabotage 

Boyd,  Frederick  S. 

New  Jersey  supreme  court;  [State  of  New 
Jersey,  defendant-in-error,  v.  Frederick 
S.  Boyd,  plaintiff-in-error:  on  writ  of 
error.]  Brief  for  plaintiff  in  error,  n.p., 
n.d.  37p 

TS 

New  Jersey  supreme  court.  [The  state  of 
New  Jersey,  defendant  in  error  v.  Fred- 
erick S.  Boyd,  plaintiff  in  error.  On 
writ  of  error.]  Case.  Michael  Dunfi, 
prosecutor  of  the  pleas  for  the  state; 
Henry  Marelli,  Gustav  A.  Huniker,  Gil- 
bert E.  Roe,  for  the  plaintiff  in  error, 
n.p.,  n.d.  47p 

TS 

Convicted  of  advocating  sabotage  during  strike 
in   Paterson   silk   mills.      Conviction   affirmed. 

New  Jersey  supreme  court.  [The  state 
of  New  Jersey,  defendant  in  error,  v. 
Frederick  S.  Boyd,  plaintiff  in  error.] 
Brief  of  defendant  in  error  in  both 
cases,  n.p.,  n.d.  14p 
TS 

Boyd  was  convicted  for  advocating  sabotage 
during  strike  in  Paterson  silk  mills.  Convic- 
tion   affirmed. 

Justice  Minturn  dissents  against  opinion 
abridging  the  right  of  free  speech.  Sur- 
vey 43:301-2   Dec  27,   1919 


Slavery,  Chattle 


Baginski,  Max 

Wendell    Phillips,    the    agitator.    Mother 
Earth  6:266-70  Nov,   1911 
TS 

Biographical,     including     persecution     of     Phil- 
lips. 

Bailey,  William   Shreve 

Prosecution  of  Wm.  S.  Bailey  for  publish- 
ing the  Free  South,   [n.p.  18—?]   2p 
B 


FREE  SPEECH 


105 


Beecher,    Edward 

Narrative  of  the  riots  at  Alton,  in  con- 
nection with  the  death  of  Rev  Elijah 
P.  Lovejoy.  Alton  [111.]  G.  Holton  1838 
159p 

HCL 

Trials  of  Winthrop  S.  Gilman  and  others 
for  the  crime  of  riot,  while  engaged 
in  defending  a  printing  press  from  an 
armed   mob.   Alton,    N.Y.    1838  2v 

Crandall,   Reuben 

Trial  of  Reuben  Crandall,  M.  D.,  charged 
with  published  seditious  libels,  by  cir- 
culating the  publications  of  the  Amer- 
ican Anti-slavery  society;  before  the 
Circuit  court  for  the  District  of  Col- 
umbia, held  at  Washington,  in  April, 
1836,  occupying  the  court  the  period  of 
ten  days.  New  York,  H.  R.  Percy  1836 
62p 

TS 

Trial  of  Reuben  Crandall,  charged  with 
publishing  and  circulating  seditious  and 
incendiary  papers,  etc.,  in  the  District 
of  Columbia,  with  the  intent  of  exciting 
servile  insurrection;  carefully  reported 
and  compiled  from  the  written  state- 
ments of  the  court  and  council;  by  a 
member  of  the  bar.  Washington,  Printed 
for  the  proprietors  1836  48p 

NY   TS 

Dillard,   James   H. 

History  and  free  speech.  Public  22:236-7 
March  8.  1919 

Around  the  bare  mention  of  postal  censor- 
ship of  abolition  literature  makes  general  argu- 
ment   for    unlimited    free    speech. 

Facts  for  the  present  crisis,  containing: 
Letter  of  Hon  Wiley  P.  Harris  to  Col 
J.  F.  H.  Claiborne;  Portions  of  the  late 
address  of  the  State  central  democratic 
committee  of  Virginia  on  the  Know- 
nothing  issues;  Resolutions  of  the  dem- 
ocratic convention  held  at  Baltimore, 
June,  1852  .  .  .  Appendix  containing 
the  celebrated  Alien  and  sedition  laws, 
with  extracts  from  the  earlier  laws  of 
Congress  concerning  naturalization  .  .  . 
With  Virginia  and  Kentucky  resolu- 
tions of  '98  and  '99  on  the  Alien  and 
sedition  laws.  New  Orleans,  Printed  at 
the  office  of  the  Louisiana  Courier  1855 
50p 

LC 

Faculty  resigns  in  Stowe  defence.  New 
York  Evening  Sun  34:2  April  28,  1920 
Northern  born  teachers  of  Chatham  Episcopal 
Institute  resign  because  of  prohibition  of  lecture 
laudatory  of  "Uncle  Tom's  Cabin"  by  H.  B. 
Stowe. 

Foulke,   William   Dudley 

.  .  .    Free    speech    ...    in    the     Chicago 

Record-Herald  of  March  21.  Public  10?: 

1237  March  28,  1908 
TS 

General  discussion  and  reference  suppression 
of    anti-slavery    literature    and    Russian    method. 

Free  speech  suppressed.  [Reference  to  the 
forced  resignation  of  Professor  Banks 
from  the  University  of  Florida  for  his 


article  A  semi-centennial  view  of  seces- 
sion.]    Independent    70:807-8    April    13, 
1911 
Y 

Freedom  of  speech  and  debate  as  illustrated 
by  John  C.  Fremont,  the  sectional  can- 
didate   for    the    presidency,    [n.p.    1856] 
4p 
LC 

Full  report  of  the  evidence  given  on  the 
conspiracy  case  [against  Rev  W.  W. 
Phillips] ;  with  the  appeals  made  to  the 
jury  .  .  .  ;  and  the  Recorder's  charge. 
New  York.  William  Stodart  1832  37p 
NY 
Gamer,  James  Wilfred,  1871- 

Dismissal    of   Professor    Banks.    Indepen- 
dent 70:900  April  27,   1911 
RG  '10-14 
Green,  Beriah 

The  martyr;  a  discourse  in  commemora- 
tion of  the  martyrdom  of  the  Rev  Elijah 
P.  Lovejoy  .  .  .  [New  York]   American 
anti-slavery  society  1838  18p 
NY  Y 
Garrison,  William  Lloyd 

Alleged    libel    on    Francis    Todd.    Boston 
1834 
Hedrick,  Benjamin  S. 

[Statement  of  the  circumstances  con- 
nected with  his  forced  retirement  from 
the  faculty  of  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  on  account  of  his  anti-slavery 
opinions.  Dated  1st  October,  1856.] 
New  York  Times  Dec  14,  1856  p4 
Jameson,  Melvin 

Elijah    Parish    Lovejoy    as    a    Christian. 
Rochester,   N.Y.   Scranton,  Wetmore  & 
CO.    [18-]    ll5p 
NY   Y 

Lovejoy  was  murdered  in  111.  in  1837  for 
anti-slavery   agitation. 

Jay,   William 

INIiscellaneous  writings  on  slavery.  Bost- 
on, Jewctt  &  CO.;  Cleveland.^O.,  Tcwett 
Proctor   &   Worthington    1853 

On  violation  of  right  of  petition,  P397-408; 
Freedom    of   speech   and   press,   PS30-7- 

Leggett,  William 

Collection  of  the  political  writings  of 
William  Leggett,  selected  and  arranged, 
with  a  preface  by  Theodore  Sedgwick, 
jr.  New  York,  Taylor  &  Dodd  1840  2v 

Volume  two,  page  7-27  contains  letters  ana 
editorials  on  postal  and  other  suppressions  of 
abolitionist   literature. 

Lincoln.  W.  S. 

Alton  trial  of  Winthrop  S.  Gilman,  et  als., 
indicted  for  the  crime  of  riot,  Nov  7, 
1837,  while  engaged  in  defending  a 
printing  press,  etc.  New  York  1838  I58p 

London  Missionary  society 

Report  of  the  proceedings  against  the 
late  Rev  J.  Smith,  of  Demerara,  min- 
ister of  the  Gospel,  who  was  tried  under 
martial  law,  and  condemned  to  death 
on  a  charge  of  aiding  and  assisting  in 
a   rebellion    of   the   negro   slaves;    from 


106 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


London  Missionary  society — Continued 

a  full  and  correct  copy,  transmitted  to 
England  by  Mr  Smiths  counsel,  and 
including  the  documentary  evidence 
omitted  in  the  Parliamentary  copy; 
containing  the  letters  and  statements 
of  Mr  and  Mrs  Smith,  Mrs  Elliott,  Mr 
Arrindell.  etc.,  and  also,  the  Society's 
petition  to  the  House  of  commons  .  .  . 
London,   F.  Westley  1824  vii,201p 

TS 

Hung^  for  violating  his  instructions  which 
read:  "Not  a  word  must  escape  you  in  public  or 
private,  which  might  render  the  slaves  displeased 
with  their  masters  or  dissatisfied  with  their  sta- 
tion." See  P170,  172,  174  of:  Smith,  John, 
"Authentic    copy    of    minutes." 

Lovejoy,  Joseph   Cammet,    1805-1871 

Memoir  of  the  Rev  Elijah  P.  Lovejoy; 
who  was  murdered  in  defence  of  the 
liberty  of  the  press,  at  Alton,  Illinois, 
Nov  7.  1837.  New  York,  J.  S.  Taylor 
1838  382p 

LC  NY  Y 

Parker,  Theodore,  1810-1860 
Trial  of  Theodore  Parker,  for  the  "mis- 
demeanor" of  a  speech  in  Faneuil  Hall 
against  kidnapping,  before  the  Circuit 
court  of  the  United  States,  at  Boston, 
April  3,  1855.  Boston,  Published  for  the 
author  1855  xx,221p 

LC  TS 

The   case  grew  out  of  the  Burns  case;   it   did 
trial,     but     Parker     published     his 
had    "obstructed"    the    process 


not     come 

defence.      Parker 

of   the   court   with   words. 


Phillips,  WendeU 

Freedom    speech,    Faneuil    Hall,    Dec.    8, 
1837;  with  descriptive  letters  from  eye- 
witnesses.  Boston   1891    16p 
HCL 

Murder    of    Lovejoy.    (In    his:    Speeches, 
lectures  and  letters,  ser.  1,  pl-10  Boston, 
Walker,  Wise  &  co.   1864) 
NY 

Right  of  petition.  (In  his:  Speeches, 
lectures  and  letters,  ser  2.  pl-6.  Boston, 
Lee   &   Shepard   1892) 

Plumer,    WUliani,    1759-1850 

Freedom's  defence;  or,  A  candid  exami- 
nation of  Mr  Calhoun's  report  on  the 
freedom  of  the  press,  made  to  the  Sen- 
ate of  the  United  States,  Feb  4,  1836; 
by  Cincinnatus,  pseud.  Worcester 
[Mass.]  Dorr,  Howland  &  co.  1836  24p 

LC  TS  Y 

Calhoun   had   approved   postal   censorship    sup- 
pressing all   slavery   literature. 

Potter,   Horatio,   1802-1887 

Intellectual  liberty;  or.  Truth  to  be 
maintained  by  reason,  not  by  physical 
power.  Albany,  N.Y.,  Packard  &  Van 
Benthuysen  1837  16p 

NY  Y 

Inspired   by   the  killing   of   Lovejoy    (abolition- 
ist)   but   general   in   language   and    application. 

Right  of  petition;  New  England  clergy- 
men; remarks  of  Messrs  Everett,  Mason, 
Pettit,  Douglas,  Butler,  Seward,  Hous- 
ton, Adams,  Badger,  on  the  memorial 
from  some  3500  clergymen  .  .  .  remon- 


strating against  the  passage  of  the 
Nebraska  bill.  Senate  of  the  United 
States,  March  14,  1854.  Washington, 
Buell  &  Blanchard   1854  16p 

NY  Y 

Seward,  WiUiam  Henry,   1801-1872 

Remarks  in  the  Senate  of  the  United 
States,  June,  1856,  concerning  Kansas 
and  the  constitutional  freedom  of  de- 
bate. [Washington  1856]  8p 

B 

Sledd,  Andrew,  1870- 

Dismissal  of  Professor  Banks.  Indepen- 
dent 70:1113-14  May  25,  1911 

RG  '10-14 

Professor  Banks  was  dismissed  from  a  Florida 
university  in  19  ii,  because  of  an  article  he 
wrote  for  the  Independant,  which  stated  that  if 
the  intellectuals  of  the  South  had  taken  the 
slavery  question  in  hand  the  Civil  War  would 
have    been    unnecessary. 

Smith,  John 

Authentic  copy  of  the  minutes  of  evidence 
on  the  trial  of  John  Smith,  a  mission- 
ary, in  Demerara;  held  at  the  colony 
house,  in  George  Town,  Demerara,  on 
Monday,  the  13th  day  of  October,  1823, 
and  27  following  days;  on  the  charge 
of  exciting  the  negroes  to  rebellion; 
copied  verbatim,  from  a  report  as  or- 
dered to  be  printed,  by  the  House  of 
commons,  22d  of  March,  1824.  With 
appendix,  including  the  affidavit  of  Mrs 
Jane  Smith,  the  petition  presented  to 
the  House  of  commons,  from  the  direct- 
ors of  the  London  Missionary  society, 
Letters  of  Mr  John  Smith,  and  other 
interesting  documents.  London.  Simp- 
kin  &  Marshall,  &  J  Nisbet  1824  179p 
TS 
Smith,  William  Henry 

Charles  Hammond  and  his  relations  to 
Henry  Clay  and  John  Quincy  Adams; 
or.  Constitutional  limitations  and  the 
contest  for  freedom  of  speech  and  press 
.  .  .  [Chicago]  Historical  society;  Cin- 
cinnati, O.,  R.  Clarke  co.  1885  72p 
NY 
Spalding,   Martin  John,    1810-1872 

Address  on  intolerant  spirit  of  the  times. 
Louisville  1854  44p 
Stanton,  Elizabeth  Cady,  1816-1902 

Free  speech.    [Speech]    at  the  4th  annual 
N.Y.  state  anti-slavery  convention,  Al- 
bany, N.Y.,  Februarv  4th  and  5th,  1861. 
[Albany?  1861?]   4p 
B 

Stroud,  George  McDowell,   1795-1875 
Sketch  of  the  laws  relating  to  slavery  in 
the  several  states  of  the  United  States 
of    America.    Philadelphia,    Kimber    & 
Sharpless  1827  180p 
LC    NY    Y 

Final  chapter  deals  with  the  encroachments 
induced  by  slavery  on  freedom  of  speech  and 
press.  Sympathy  of  author  anti-slavery. 
Same;  with  some  alteration  and  consider- 
able additions.  2d  ed  Philadelphia,  H. 
Longstreth  1856  xii,125p 
TS 


FREE  SPEECH 


107 


Tanner,   Henry 

Martyrdom  of  Lovejoy:  life  of  Rev  Elijah 
P.  Lovejoy,  who  was  killed  by  a  pro- 
slavery  mob  at  Alton,  111..  1837.  Chi- 
cago, Fergus  printing  co.  1881 

Contains  Dr  Channing's  address  citizens  of 
Boston  and  speech  of  Wendell  Phillips  at 
Faneuil    Hall    covering    the    killing. 

"What  is  liberty  of  the  press?  It  is  the  lib- 
erty of  printing  as  well  as  the  liberty 
of  publishing  in  all  the  ordinary  modes 
of  publication  and  is  not  the  circula- 
tion of  papers  through  the  mails  an 
ordinary  mode  of  publication."  Webster 
answered  yes!  (In:  Miller,  M.  M.,  ed. 
Great  debates  in  American  history.  4: 
103) 


Socialists  and  Non-Partisans 

Adler,  Felix,  and  Salter,  William  M. 

Right     of     political     asylum     threatened. 
Ethical   Addresses   and    Ethical    Record 
16:115-35  Jan,   1909 
TS 

Centers   largely   on    Russian    refugees. 

Almy,   Frederic 

Land   of  the  free.   Nation   108:352   March 
8.   1919 

Bell,  Ralcy  Husted,  1869- 

Free    speech    and    free    speakers.    Social 
Builder  1:11   May,  1918 

Borah,  William  E. 

Destroying  representative  government; 
New  York  legislature  scored  a  hasty 
action  which  denies  five  representatives 
of  their  seats  in  the  assembly.  La  Fol- 
lette's  Magazine  12:23  Feb,  1920 
TS 

Frotn     address    in     U.S.     Senate.       Historical 
viewpoint,    and    favoring   intellectual    freedom. 

Russianized  ideals  rule  at  university,  no 
free  speech  for  professors;  dismissal  of 
instructor  for  "active  interest  .^^hown 
in  economic  questions:"  administration's 
responsibility;  Prof  R.  B.  Brinsmade's 
interest  in  the  single  tax  propaganda 
costs  him  his  chair  at  the  West  Virginia 
state  university.  Morgantown  Post- 
Chronicle  June   13,  1911 

TS 

Calhoun,    Arthur    Wallace 

Academic     slavery.     New     Review    2:95-7 
Feb.  1914 
TS 

Deals    with    suppression    of    socialist    doctrines 
among   university    economists. 

Case    of    Professor    Scott    Nearing;    report 

of    committee.    School    and    Society    3: 

757-63    May   27,    1916 
RG  '16 
Case  of  Scott  Nearing.  Survey  34:289  June 

26.   1915 
RG  -15 
Case  of  the  Rand  school.  New  York,  Rand 

school  of  social  science  1919  18p 
TS 

Account    of   raid   made   by   legislative   commit- 
tee, and  protests. 


[Century  magazine  for  December,  1888 
with  the  pages  of  George  Kennan's 
Siberian  article  cut  out  by  the  Russian 
censor,  and  portions  of  the  remaining 
text  blackened  or  erased;  accompanied 
by  the  Nation  (New  York)  for  October 
23,  1890,  containing  a  narration  of  Miss 
Isabel  Hapgood's  experience  with  the 
censorship  and  her  recovery  of  the 
pages  cut  from  this  issue  of  the  Cen- 
tury.] 

NY 

Charters.  Zelda  Stewart 

"The  Call"  raid:  a  study  in  mob  psvchol- 
ogy.   Call   Magazine   May   12,   1919  p2,7 

TS 

Gives  account  of  May  day  mobbing  of  publica- 
tion   office    of    New    York    Call. 

Checho-Slavak  socialists,  before  Hungarian 
outbreak  made  firm  demand  for  power 
.  .  .  and  abolishing  curb  on  speech. 
New  York  Evening  World  59:19  March 
28.  1919 

Cohen,    Chapman 

L[ondon]  C[ounty]  C[ouncil]  and  free- 
dom of  propaganda.  Freethinker  39: 
379-80  Aug  3,  1919 

TS 

Deals  with  prohibiting  sale  of  free-thought 
and  socialist  papers  in  parks.  Also  discusses 
editorial  thereon  appearing  in  London  Star, 
July   23,    1919. 

Committee  votes  to  expel  socialists;  five 
held  disloyal  to  constitution.  New 
York  Evening  Sun  34:1  March  30,  1920 

TS 

Deals  with  socialist  members  of  the  New 
York  legislature.  See  also  other  papers  of  same 
date. 

Coomer,   Hobart 

Brief  of  plaintiff  in  error.   [United  States 
circuit    court   of   appeals.]    .  .  .    Patrick 
S.  Nagle,  attorney  for  plaintiff  in  error. 
Kingfisher,  Oklahoma  n.p.,  n.d.  24p 
TS 

See:  Schroeder.  T.  Also  Federal  Reporter 
213:1.  Also:  Industrial  Relations  11:10882. 
In  the  United  States  circuit  court  of  ap- 
peals; eighth  circuit;  no.  4O50.  [Hobart 
Coomer,  plaintiff  in  error  v.  United 
States  of  America,  defendant  in  error.] 
Brief  of  defendant  in  error.  Isaac  D. 
Taylor,  United  States  attorney  n.p.,  n.d. 
28p 
TS 

See  Federal  Reporter  213:1. 
Transcript  of  record;  United  States  circuit 
court  of  appeals,  eighth  circuit;  no.  4050. 
[Hobart  Coomer,  plaintiff  in  error  v. 
United  States  of  America,  defendant 
in  error.]  In  error  to  the  district  court 
of  the  United  States  for  the  western 
district   of   Oklahoma,   n.p.   1913  28p 

TS 

Cope,  Edgar,  jr.  . 

Pennsylvania  and  the  Nearing  case.  Inter- 
collegiate  1:9 

Danger  ahead.  Nation  108:186-7  Feb  8.  1919 

Dangerous  business  of  making  martyrs. 
American  Monthly  10:79  May,   1919 

TS 


108 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Debs,  Eugene  Victor 

Debs  white  book;  full  text  of  important 
documents  in  famous  Debs  case.  Girard, 
Kan.,  Appeal  to  reason  n.d.  96p 

Supreme  court  of  the  United  States,  Oc- 
tober term,  1918.  No  714.  [Eugene  V. 
Debs,  plaintiff  in  error  against  the  Uni- 
ted States  of  America;  in  error  to  the 
District  court  of  the  United  States  for 
the  northern  district  of  Ohio.]  Brief 
of  Gilbert  E.  Roe  as  Amicus  curiae. 
New  York   [1919] 

Deporting  a  political  party.  New  Republic 
21:186-7  Jan   14,   1920 

Criticises  deportation  of  socialists,  commun- 
ists,  etc.  by  U.S. 

Fight  for  elementary  Americanism.  Bul- 
letin League  of  Free  Nations  Associa- 
tion  1:7  March,  1920 

TS 

A  declaration  signed  by  about  120  distinguished 
citizens  against  expulsion  of  Socialist  members 
from    N.Y.    Assembly. 

[Flannigan,  Steve  L.,  and  Hartman,  Frank 
L.] 
Free  Press  cases  up  in  September;  super- 
ior court  denies  writ  of  habeas  corpus, 
leaving  case  in  same  position  .  .  .  Free 
Press  3:[1]   July  22,   1911 

TS 

Refers  to  indictment  for  contempt  of  court 
on   charge    of    "class    court." 

Free  Press  editors  thrown  into  jail  at 
New  Castle;  Flanagan,  Hartman  and 
McKeever  locked  up  on  contempt 
charge;  capitalist  fight  to  squelch  free 
speech  in  steel  center  again  on.  New 
York    Call   June    13,    1911 

TS 

Surrendered  to  sue  out  writ  of  habess  cor- 
pus. Writ  denied  by  upper  _  court  later.  De- 
fendants   convicted    for    charging    "class    court." 

Free  Press  men  are  pronounced  guilty; 
McKeever  excepted.  Trial  of  socialist 
editors  abject  farce;  fight  to  go  on; 
convicted  of  contempt — seditious  libel 
case  Monday.  New  York  Call  Sept 
15.  1911 
TS 

Defendants  had  criticised  "class  court"  in  a 
case    in    which    socialists    were    interested. 

Judge  Porter's  charge  to  the  jury  in  the 
constructive  contempt  of  court  case 
September  13,  1911.  Free  Press  4:4-5 
Sept  23,  1911 

Speech  of  C.  E.  Mehard  to  quash  indict- 
ment in  contempt  of  court  case.  Free 
Press  4:3   Sept  23,  1911 

Includes  the  offending  articles  on  "Judge 
Porter's   class  court." 

Foubert,  L. 

Critique  socialiste  de  la  liberte  d'en- 
seignement.  Revue  Socialiste  34:1-2  3 
1901 

Free  speech  and  free  press  go  to  trial  with 
Scott  Nearing.  Portrait  n.d.,  n.p.  [New 
York  1918] 


Free  speech  in  a  public  hall.  Survey  41:934 
March  29,    1919 

Freedom   of   opinion   and   the    clergy.    New 
Republic  21:303-5    Feb    11,    1920 

Discusses  protest  of  leading  clergy  against 
deportation  of  radicals,  expulsion  of  socialists 
from  N.Y.  State  assembly  and  against  proposed 
sedition  law. 

Freedom  of  speech.   Independent  53:2366-8 
Oct  3.   1901 

Deals  with  conviction  of  Eugene  Debs  and 
war    censorship. 

Giovannitti.  Arturo 

Socialists    and    suppression.    Liberator    1: 
13-14  Aug,  1918 
TS 

From   viewpoint   of   utmost   freedom. 

[Goldman,  Emma] 

[Suppression   of  Rabochaya   Rech.]    [Ed- 
itorial]  Mother  Earth  11:663  Nov,  1916 
TS 

Suppression  of  Worker's  Voice  by  the  post 
office    department. 

Gunn,    John   W. 

Reign  of  terror  stamped  out  free  speech 
in    Minnesota    during    war.    Appeal    to 
Reason  no.  1244  Oct  4,  1919 
TS 

Deals  at  length  with  mob  rule  in  suppressing 
meetings  of  Non-partisan  league  and  socialists 
done     with     express    official    sanction. 

Hand,  John 

Socialist    press    throttled    by    the    postal 
censorship.  Social  Revolution  Aug,  1917 
p2 
Harvey,  Alexander 

The  Bang.  vl2  no   17.  July  16,    1917 

Eight  pages  devoted  to  postal  censorship 
against   socialists. 

Hayes,  Ellen,  and  others 

Freedom  of  speech  and  press  and  con- 
science. Intercollegiate  Socialist  Dec 
1917  p26-7 

Report  of  speeches  inspired  by  war  censorship 
delivered  at  conference  at  Belfort,  Long  Island, 
Sept.    18    to    24,    1917. 

Hot  disputes  mark  trial  of  Glassberg; 
former  Brooklyn  high  school  teacher 
refuses  to  answer  questions  as  to  po- 
litical views.  New  York  Tribune  79: [1] 
May    10,    1919 

TS 

Injunction  case  won  by  socialists;  law  on 
subject  clear.  Justice  Oct  19,  1912 

Johns,  Dorothy 

Victims  of  the  system;  how  crime  grows 
in  jail  and  city  hall.  Chicago,  Kerr  & 
CO.  n.d.   [1908]   31p 

TS 

Sentenced  for  violating  anti-free  speech  ordi- 
nance in  Los  Angeles.  Deals  with  problem  from 
socialist-economic  viewpoint.  Not  much  on  free 
speech. 

Johnson,  C.  R. 

Conviction  of  [A.  C]  Townley.  New  Re- 
public 20:18-20  Aug  6,  1919 

TS 

Townley  is  pursued  because  president  of  the 
Non-partisan  league. 


FREE  SPEECH 


109 


Karsner,  David 

Debs  goes   to  prison.   New   York,   Irving 
Kayc   Davis   &  co.   1919 
TS 

Deals  with  imprisonment  under  war  censor- 
ship, and  mentions  imprisonment  in  Pullman 
strike  1894.  Enlarged  from  New  York  Call, 
April    i3-i9>    1919- 

Kellogg,  Arthur  P. 

Traffic  squad  at  Union  square.  Charities 
and  the  Commons  20:9-12  April  4,  1908 

King,  Judson 

Banking  and  steel  interests  and  the  Town- 
ley  trial.  Public  22:1089-90  Nov  22,  1919 
TS 

Shows  economic  motive  behind  the  prosecution 
of   Mr   Townley   of  the   Non-partisan   league. 

Case  of  Mr  [A.  C]  Townley;  judge  re- 
fuses to  admit  testimony  showing  ad- 
vocacy of  liberty  bond  buying;  defend- 
ant not  allowed  to  address  the  jury. 
La  Follette's  Magazine  11:130-1 
TS 

Republished  from  The  Nation.  Deals  with  the 
trial  of  Townley,  Joseph  Gilbert,  and  Irving 
Freitag  of  the  Non-partisan  league,  before  Judge 
Dean    at   Jackson,    Minn. 

Kirk,  E.  E. 

Is  free  speech  right  or  wrong?  [Brief  in 
support  of  the  right  to  free  speaking 
in  San  Diego  streets.]  San  Diego,  Cal., 
Free  speech  committee  [1912]   7p 

Deals  with  preliminaries  of  the  San  Diego 
free  speech  fight.  See  Schroeder,  T.  "Free 
speech    for    radicals;"    enlarged    edition. 

Knowles,  Freeman 

Convicted.    Lantern    4:[1]    May    28,    1908 
TS 

Comments  on  his  own  conviction  which  was 
affirmed  in:  Federal  Reporter  170:409.  The  of- 
fending article  is  republished  in  above  article 
also    in:    Industrial    relations.      Final    report    and 

testimony,     :  i :  1 0877-8. 

From    the    Free    speech   league.    Lantern 
4:[1]    July  2,   1908 
TS 

Comment  from  various  sources  on  editor 
Knowles'    conviction. 

Laidler,  Harry  Wellington,  1884- 

Boycotts  and  the  labor  struggle;  eco- 
nomic and  legal  aspects  .  .  .  with  an 
introduction  by  Henry  R.  Secger.  Lon- 
don, John  Lane  co.  1914  488p 

Pages  ig8-9  deal  with  the  claim  that  boycott 
notices  are  protected  as  a  part  of  freedom  of 
the  press.  Press  control,  P307-17.  Other  chap- 
ters deal  with  the  "conspiracy"  charge  as  a 
move    of    suppressing   boycott    propaganda. 

Free  speech  in  our  colleges.  Vassar  Sup- 
plement; Intercollegiate  Socialist  Feb, 
1916  pl5-16 

Lassalle,      Ferdinand      [Johann      Gottlieb! 

1825-1864 
An  die  arbeiter  Berlins.  Berlin,  R.  Schling- 

niann    1863   25p 
NY 

Die  feste,  die  presse  und  dcr  frankfurter 

abgeordnetentag;    drei    symptome    des 

oflfenlichen      geistes      .  .  .      Diisseldorf, 

Nadelen   [1863]   38p 
NY 


Law  and  evidence  in  Debs  case  reviewed 
as  Appeal's  great  popular  trial  closes. 
Appeal  to  Reason  no.  1248  Nov  1,  1919 

TS 

Debs    sentenced   for   socialist-pacifist   speech. 

Lieby,   A. 

Presse     revolutionnaire     et     la     censure 

theatrale.    Revolution   Frangaise  45:306- 

53,  447-70,  502-29;  46:13-28,  97-128  1903-4 

Light  on  the  Nearing  case.  Literary  Digest 

51:248-9  Aug  7,  1915 
RG  '15 
McKaig,   Ray 

Townley  mistrial.  Public  22:855-7  Aug  9, 
1919 
TS 

Reports  trial  and  conviction  of  A.  C.  Town- 
ley,  president  of  the  Non-partisan  league,  at 
Jackson,  Minn.,  on  charge  of  conviction  to 
defeat    draft. 

McKeever,  Charles  A. 

In  the  superior  court  of  Pennsylvania, 
fifth  district.  [Commonwealth,  ex  rel  v. 
Robert  Whaley,  sheriff.]  Rule  for  writ 
of  habeas  corpus  and  certiorari,  return- 
able July  11th,  1911,  at  Philadelphia, 
Pa.   Brief  for  relators,  n.p.,  n.d.  46p 

TS 

Contains  indictment  of  socialist  editors  of 
Free  Press  of  Lancaster,  Pa.  for  seditious  libel. 

Memorial  to  the  Congress  of  the  United 
States  concerning  conditions  in  Minne- 
sota, 1918.  By  the  National  and  state 
executive  committees  of  the  National 
non    partisan    league    [1918]    120p 

Merrick.  Fred  H. 

Acquit  Merrick  of  libel;  editor  of  Justice 
legally  right  in  prison  expose  .  .  . 
prosecution  tries  to  compromise  when 
Marron  threatens  to  lift  lid.  New  York 
Call  4:[1]   Nov  30,  1911 

TS 

Had  charged  sexual  perversion  in  Pennsylvania 
penitentiary    with    complicity    of    deputy    warden. 

Criminal  libel  case  against  Justice  fails; 
conditions  in  western  penitentiary  are 
shown  to  be  degrading;  Alarron  refused 
to  bring  out  more  disgusting  facts.  Free 
speech  4:[1]  Dec  2,  1911 
TS 

Release  from  jail.  Justice  Jan  20,   1912 
TS 

Served  4  months  for  criticising  courts  in 
dealing  tenderly  with  "capitalist"  criminals,  as 
compared   with   labor   radicals. 

Mob  in  high  places.  New  Republic  21:279- 
81   Feb  4.  1920 

Discusses  the  assault  upon  socialists  of  New 
York  made  by  soldiers. 

Morse,  E.  L.  C. 

Excluding  speakers  from  Harvard.  Nation 
104:158-9  Feb  8,  1917 
RG  '17 

Myers,  Gustavus 

It  all   depends.    Rev   1:261-4  Aug  2,    1919 

Non  partisan  leaguers  are  convicted  in 
farce  trial.  Appeal  to  Reason  no.  1235 
Aug  2,   1919 

TS 

Deals  with  the  conviction  of  A.  C.  Townley 
and    Joseph    Gilbert. 


110 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Notes  at  large.  Truth  Seeker  46:152  March 
8,  1919 

Gives  an  account  of  discrimination  in  police 
permits  for  street  speaking.  Free-thinkers, 
socialists   and   bolshivists   are  prohibited. 

Oppenheimer,  Moses 

Right    of   asylum.    New    Review    1:267-71 
March  1,  1913 
TS 

Presents   socialist   and   historical   viewpoint. 

Opposes  socialists  in  city  [New  York] 
schools,  Dr  Tildsley  declares  teachers 
holding  Marxian  views  should  be  dis- 
missed. New  York  Times  68:6  April 
27.    1919 

TS 

Speaker  was  associate  superintendent  in 
charge  of  New  York  high  schools. 

Passing  show.   Agitator   1:1   April   15,    1911 
TS 

Gives  account  of  a  man  fined  $50  for  dis- 
tributing   political    cartoon. 

Pinchot,   Amos 

Protecting  the  old  order;  decision  of 
Supreme  court  in  Debs  case  abridges 
free  speech  amendment  to  constitution; 
court  mandate  is  looking  backward.  La 
Follette's  Magazine   11:39   March,   1919 

TS 

Postmaster  general's  order  to  his  post- 
masters. Appeal  to  Reason  no.  653  July 
4.    1908 

TS 

Page  of  discussion  about  use  of  sex  cen- 
sorship to  exclude  the  socialist  papers  from  the 
mails. 

Raiding  as  an  aid  to  faith.  Nation  108:1000 
June  28,   1919 

Reds  in  Toledo  [Ohio]  riot  as  the  police 
stop  Debs'  speech;  convict  agitator's 
followers  storm  city  hall  when  admis- 
sion is  denied.  New  York  Evening 
World  59:7  March  31,  1918 

TS 

Mayor  Cornell  Schreiber  said  no  meeting 
would  be  permitted  anywhere  in  the  city  where 
men   of   radical   tendencies   were   to   speak. 

Reed,  John 

Persecution  of  Mexican  refugees.  Masses 
8:22  June,  1916 
TS 
Roe,    Gilbert    Emstein 

The  socialist  trial  at  Albany;  the  action 
of  the  New  York  House  in  throwing 
out  assemblymen  is  without  precedent. 
La  Follette's  Magazine  22:64-5  April. 
1920 
TS 

A  carefully  prepared  statement  of  the  initial 
proceedings  and  subsequent  hearing  by  a  law- 
yer who  volunteered  to  aid  in  their  defense. 

San    Diego's    free    speech    troubles.     Liter- 
ary Digest  44:1146  June   1,   1912 
RG  '10-14 

Schreiber,  Cornell 

Free    speech   in   public   halls.    Survey   41: 
934  March  29,  1919 
TS  .     . 

Editorial  quoting  Mayor  Cornell  Schreiber 
of  Toledo  favoring  lease  to  socialists  of  publicly 
owned  hall.  See  also  Baltimore  News,  April 
7,  1919,  for  extending  free  speech  principle  to 
use   of    Toledo    streets. 


Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,  1864- 

Free  speech  for  radicals,  enl  ed  Riverside, 

Conn.,    Published    for   the    Free   speech 

league   1916  206p 
TS 

Story  of  the  San  Diego  [Cal.]  free  speech 

fight.    New    York    Call,    Sunday    issues 

7:9,    14,    10,   11    March    15,  22,  29.  April 

5.   1914 
TS 

Schwarze,   Louis   Friedrich   Oskar   von 
Reichsgesetz     gcgen     die     gcmeingefahr- 
lichen  bestrebungcn  d.  socialdemokratie 
vom  21   okt.   1878.    (In:   Bezold,   Ernest 
von.  Die  gesetzgebung.  4:1-67.  1874) 

HCL 

Shillady,  John 

Appeal  for  free  speech.  Published  by  the 
Educational  association  (by  permission 
of  the  author)   (v.  1.  no.  1  1906) 
TS 

Deals  with  suppression  of  Emma  Goldman  and 
some    socialists    in    Buffalo,    N.Y. 

Socialists  can't  be  citizens.  Appeal  to  Rea- 
son no.    1224:1   May  17,   1919 
TS 

Quotes  and  comments  on  news  dispatch  from 
Sedalia,  Men.,  May  6,  to  Kansas  City  Times, 
to  effect  that  a  court  denied  naturalization  to 
a    socialist. 

Soviets  and  suspicion;  search  of  the  offices 
of  the  Russian  soviet  government  in 
New  York  city.  Public  22:649-50  June 
21.  1919 

Speaker  Sweet  does  his  bit.  New  Republic 
21:210-12  Jan  21,    1920 

Discusses  expulsion  of  socialists  from  N.Y. 
State  Assembly  and  beating  of  radicals  in  jail 
by    fellow    convicts. 

Special  Debs  number.  New  Justice  no.  4:1 

April  1,  1919 
TS 

Contains  articles  on  Eugene  V.  Debs  con- 
victed under  war  censorship. 

Stone,  Melville  Elijah 

Removal    of    the    Russian    censorship    on 
foreign  news.  Century  Magazine  70:143- 
51    1905 
Y 

Suspension  of  the  Assemblymen;  a  sympo- 
sium. Socialist  Review  8:176-85 

Quotes  many  opposed  to  proposed  expulsion 
of   socialists   from   N.Y.    State   assembly. 

Townley,  A.  C,  and  Gilbert,  Joseph 

State  of  Minnesota,  in  Supreme  court, 
1918.  [State  of  Minnesota,  plaintiff,  vs. 
A.  C.  Townley  and  Joseph  Gilbert,  de- 
fendants.] Record.  Minneapolis,  Review 
pub.    CO.,    printers   n.d.    Up 

Defendants  had  been  convicted  for  utterances 
alleged  to  discourage  enlistment  in  army  or 
navy.      Conviction    reversed. 

State  of  Minnesota,  in  Supreme  court. 
[State  of  Minnesota,  plaintiflf,  vs.  A.  C. 
Townley  and  Joseph  Gilbert,  defend- 
ants.] Brief  for  defendants.  Minneapolis, 
Review  pub.  co.,  printers  n.d.  53p 


FREE  SPEECH 


111 


Townsend,  Arthur  O. 

Repression  the  path  to  peace.  Arbitrator 
2:1-6  May,  1920 

This  answers  John  Haynes  Holmes:  Repres- 
sion the  road  to  rebellion.  This  present  issue 
contains  also  short  rebuttal  by  Holmes.  Town- 
send  has  florid  rhetoric  instead  of  observed 
facts. 

Traubel,    Horace 

Nearing  case.  Conservator  26:119-20 

Deals  with  case  of  Professor  Nearing  dis- 
missed from  the  University  of  Pennsylvania  for 
economic    heresy. 

Trustees  of  the  University  of  Pennsylvania 
on  academic  freedom.  Science  n  s  42: 
555-6   Oct  22,   1915 

University  bars  Dr  Louis  Levine;  Montana 
state  suspends  noted  economic  expert 
for  insubordination;  tax  pamphlet  the 
issue;  publication  of  report  showing 
copper  mines  do  not  bear  their  share 
said  to  be  cause.  New  York  Times 
Feb  15,  1919 

Verinder,  Frederick 

L[ondon]    C[ounty]    C[ouncill    cenorship. 
Freethinker  39:541-2  Nov.  2,  1919 
TS 

Reports  controversy  on  prohibition  of  sale 
of  literature  of  freethought,  socialism  and  Rus- 
sian   revolution,    in    public    parks. 

Waldman,  Louis 

Albany  the  crisis  in  government;  intro- 
duction by  Seymour  Stcdman.  New 
York,  Boni  &  Liveright  1920 

Gives  account  of  the  ousting  of  socialists  from 
N.Y.  Assembly  by  one  of  the  excluded  ones. 

Want  law  schools  to  bar  socialists;  move- 
ment is  begun  in  New  York  State  as- 
sociation of  legal  instructors;  would 
withhold  diplomas;  radicals  admitted 
to  the  bar  doubly  dangerous  says  resol- 
ution sent  to  committee;  views  of  deans 
differ.  New  York  Times  69:1  April  4, 
1920 

TS 

Warren,  Fred  D. 

In  the  United  States  circuit  court  of  ap- 
peals, eighth  district.  [Fred  D.  Warren, 
plaintiff  in  error,  vs.  United  States  of 
America.]  Defendant  in  error  brief  of 
defendant  in  error,  n.p.  [1910]  42p 

In  the  United  States  circuit  court  of  ap- 
peals, eighth  district.  [Fred  D.  Warren, 
plaintiff  in  error,  vs.  United  States  of 
America,  defendant  in  error.]  Brief  and 
argument  for  plaintiff  in  error,  Kansas 
City,  Mo.,  J.  C.  Bovard,  printer  [1910] 
58p 

Convicted  of  sending  by  mail  with  wrapper 
containing   scurrilous    matter. 

Wayland,  J.  A.,  Phifer,  C.  L.,  and  Warren, 
Fred  D. 

In  the  District  court  of  the  United  States, 
district  of  Kansas,  third  division.  [Uni- 
ted States,  plaintiff,  vs.  T.  A.  Wayland, 
C.  L.  Phifer,  and  Fred  D.  Warren,  de- 
fendants.]   Brief  of  defendant   Fred    D. 


Warren,  on  demurrer.  Kansas  City,  Mo., 
Smith-Grieves   typesetting  co.,   printers 
n.d.   168p 
TS 

Defendants,  socialists,  exposed  sexual  eccen- 
tricity of  a  warden  at  U.S.  penetentiary.  Dis- 
charged. 

Wells,   Herbert  George,   1866- 

Futurc  in  America.  New  York,  Harper  & 
brothers   1906 

Chapter  ii.  The  riddle  of  intolerance:  ttie 
MacQueen  case.  The  latter  was  convicted  for 
a  speech  in  connection  with  a  silk  workers  strike 
in   Paterson,   N.J. 

What  the   Nearing  case  won.   Literary  Di- 
gest 52:70  Jan  8,   1916 
RG  '16 

What  they  say.  To-morrow  1:50  Aug,  1905 
Reproduces      from      Reader      Magazine      short 
article    on    expulsion    of    Professor   Oscar    Lovell 
Triggs   from   Chicago   university. 

White,  Bouck 

Supreme  court,  appellate  division — first 
department.  [The  people  of  the  state 
of  New  York,  respondent,  against 
Bouck  White,  defendant-appellant.] 
Case  on  appeal.  [New  York]  Ebert 
press  n.d.  79p 

This  socialist  was  convicted  for  desecrating 
the    flag,    see    decision. 

While  Palmer  [U.  S.  attorney  general]  de- 
cides against  Gene  Debs,  federal  judge 
upholds  right  of  opinion.  Appeal  to 
Reason   no.   1220:1   April   19,   1919 

TS 

Four  volumns  on  Debs  case  under  espionage 
law.  See  U.S.  Supreme  Court  Reporter  39: 
252-4. 

Witmer,   Lightner 

Nearing  case;  the  limitation  of  academic 
freedom  at  the  University  of  Pennsyl- 
vania by  act  of  the  board  of  trustees 
June  14,  1915;  a  brief  of  facts  and 
opinions.  New  York,  B.  W.  Huebsch 
1915  xxi,123p 

TS 

Zench,  W.  E. 

Truth  about  the  Kate  Richards  O'Hare 
case.  Appeal  of  Reason  no.  1243  Sept 
27.    1919 

— and   O'Hare,   Kate   Richards 

Truth  about  the  O'Hare  case,  by  W.  E. 
Zench;  and  Kate  Richards  O'Hare's  ad- 
dress to  the  court.  St  Louis,  Mo.,  Frank 
P.  O'Hare  n.d.  1919  31p 

Syndicalists 

Dolsen,  James  H. 

Defense  of  a  revolutionist  by  himself; 
story  of  the  trial  of  James  H.  Dolsen 
who  defended  himself  on  the  charge  of 
criminal  syndicalism,  Superior  court, 
Oakland,  California  March  23-.\pril 
23,   1920.    112p 

TS 

Gives  illustrated  account  of  trial  for  criminal 
syndicalism.  After  a  month  of  trial  jury  dis- 
agreed. Defendant's  argument  quoted  from 
many    documents    used    in    evidence. 


112 


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Franklin,  F.  G. 

Anti-syndicalist  legislation.  American  Po- 
litical Science  Review  14:291-8  May, 
1920 

Great  conspiracy;  three  criminal  syndicalist 
laws  in  old  Russia,  in  Washington,  in 
Germany.  [1920]  4p 

TS 

Roser,   Henry  H. 

Criminal  syndicalism?  New  Justice  1:10-11 
June    15,    1919 

TS 

Tells  of  the  arrest  of  John  C.  Taylor  and 
Edward  R.  Alverson  under  new  California 
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Teachers,  Freedom  of 

Academic  freedom  denied;  the  committee 
of  economists  reports  on  the  Ross 
case;  the  professor  at  Leland  Stanford 
university  forced  out  because  his  views 
displeased  Mrs  Stanford.  New  York 
Evening   Post  Feb  23,   1901   p7 

Academic  situation.  Popular  Science  Month- 
ly 82:307-9  March,   1913 

RG  '10-14 

American  association  of  university  profes- 
sors 

Bulletin   of   the   American   association    of 
university     professors,     (v.     3,     no.     4) 
Boston,  The  association  April,  1917  21p 
TS 

"Report  of  the  subcommittee  on  the  case  of 
Professor  Joseph  K.  Hart  of  the  University  of 
Washington,"    P13-16. 

Bulletin  of  the  American  association  of 
university  professors;  containing  a  re- 
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(v.  4,  no.  2-3)  Boston,  The  association 
1918  49p 

Bulletin  of  the  American  association  of 
university  professors;  report  on  the 
College  of  Wooster.  (v.  3,  no.  5)  pt  1 
Boston   May,   1917   ISOp 

"Academic  freedom:  report  on  conditions  at 
the  college  of  Wooster  and  the  dismissal  of 
the  dean  of  women,"  P13-1S0. 
General  report  of  the  Committee  on  aca- 
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uses 

Report  of  the  committee  of  inquiry  con- 
cerning charges  of  violation  of  aca- 
demic freedom,  involving  the  dismissal 
of  the  president  and  three  members  of 
the  faculty  at  the  University  of  Mon- 
tana, (v.  3.  no.  5)  Boston,  The  asso- 
ciation 1917  52p 
TS 

Report  of  the  committee  of  the  Amer- 
ican association  of  university  profes- 
sors on  academic  freedom  and  academic 
tenure.  School  and  Society  3:109-21  Jan 
22.   1916 

Report  of  the  committee  of  the  American 
association  of  university  professors  on 
academic  freedom  in  wartime.  School 
and  Society  7:241-54  March  2,  1918 


Committee  of  inquiry  on  conditions  at  the 
University  of   Utah 
Report.    Baltimore,   Secretary   of  associa- 
tion  1915  82p 

Are  the  great  Montana  mines  deliberately 
dodging  taxes?  Startling  disclosures 
made  by  Dr  [Louis]  Levine  lead  to  his 
suspension  from  the  University  of  Mon- 
tana. Current  Opinion  66:335-6  May, 
1919 

Balliet,  Thomas  M. 

Liberty  in  teaching.  American  Teacher 
3:146-8   Dec,   1914 

MEP  '14 

Barthou,  Louis,  1862- 

La  revolution  et  la  liberte  d'cnseigne- 
ment.   Revue  de   Paris   1:493-507   1903 

Beard,  Charles  Austin,  1874- 

Statement  of  experiences  with  the  admin- 
istration of  Columbia  university.  New 
Republic  13:249-51   Dec  29,   1917 

RG  '18 

A  statement.  New  Republic  13:249-50  Dec 
29,  1917 

TS 

Gives  reasons  for  resignation  from  faculty 
of  Columbia  university  because  authorities  limit 
academic    freedom. 

Bourne,  Randolph  Silliman,   1886- 

Those  Columbia  trustees.  New  Republic 
12:328-9  Oct  20,   1917 

Brown,    Elmer    Ellsworth,    1861- 

Academic  freedom.  Educational  Review 
19:209-31    March,    1900 

Burning  issue  of  free  speech  at  eastern  as 
well  as  western  universities.  Current 
Opinion    59:111-13    Aug,    1915 

RG  '15 

Case  of  Professor  Whipple.  University  of 
Virginia  Alumni  Bulletin  11:86-98  Jan, 
1918 

Columbia  [university]  rocks  in  an  uproar 
over  free  speech.  New  York  Tribune 
Review  Oct  14,   1917  p3 

Demands  of  the  professor's  union  for  pro- 
tection and  academic  freedom.  Current 
Opinion  60:192-3   March,   1916 

Dewey,  John,  1859- 

Academic  freedom.  Educational  Review 
23:1-14  Jan,    1902 

Y 

Control  of  universities.  School  and  So- 
ciety 2:673  Nov  6,  1915 

RG  '15 

Freedom  of  thought  and  work.  New  Re- 
public 22:316-17  May  5,   1920 

Discipline  of  teachers  for  "heresies"  in 
Washington  (D.C.)  public  schools. 
[Washington,   D.C]    1919  22p 

TS 

Dismissal  of  Professor  Ross;  report  [of 
the  committee,  appointed  at  the_  meet- 
ing of  the  economists  in  Detroit,  De- 
cember 28,  1900,  to  enquire  into  the 
causes  of  the  dismissal  of  Professor 
Ross  from  Leland  Stanford  university], 
n.t.p.    [1901?]    I5p 

NY 


FREE  SPEECH 


113 


Dismissal  of  professors;  views  on  the  sub- 
ject by  leading  college  presidents  .  .  . 
New  York  Evening  Post  March  25, 
1901    p7 

Dodd,    William    Edward,    1869- 
Democracy  and  the  university.  Nation  101 : 
463-5    Oct    14,    1915 
RG  '16 

Freedom  of  speech  in  the  South.  Nation 
84:383-4  April   25,   1907 

Educational  freedom.  Independent  70:913 
April  27,    1911 

Folly    of    gagging    professors.    School    and 

Society  1:930-1  June  26,  1915 
RG  '15 

Free   speech    in    Columbia   university.    Out- 
look 117:238-9  Oct  17,  1917 
RG  '17 

Free  speech  in  the  South.  Independent  55: 

137-9   1903 
Y 

Free  thought  in  college  economics.  [Edi- 
torial] Gunton's  Magazine  17:456-61 
1899 

Y 

Gunton    was    subsidized    by    some    millionaires 
as  their   propagandist 

Gillette,  John  Morris,  1866- 
Academic    freedom.    School    and    Society 
2:873-9  Dec   18,   1916 
RG  '16 

Oilman,  Charlotte  Perkins 

Free    speech    in    the    schools.    Forerunner 
6:9-10  Jan.   1915 

Glassberg,   Benjamin 

Teachers'  league:  a  new  movement.  New 
Review  1:447-8  April  5,  1913 
TS 

Organized   to   protect    also   rights    of    teachers. 

Hyde,  William  DeWitt,   1858- 

Academic   freedom    in    America.    Interna- 
tional Monthly  4:1-20  1901 

Is  the  college  professor  a  hired  man?  Lit- 
erary Digest  51:65  July  10,  1915 
RG  '15 

Jastrow,  Joseph,  1863- 

Academic     consciousness.     Dial     60:262-3 
March   16,   1916 
RG  '16 

Lane.  Winthrop   D. 

Givinsr  the   teachers   a  voice.   Survey  39: 
279-81    Dec  8.   1917 
MEP   '17 

LeroUe,  Paul 

Libcrte  d'enseignement.  Reforme  Sociale 
8:389-407   1899 
Y 

Leroy-Beaulieu,  Anatole 

Liberte  d'enseignement.  Reforme  Sociale 
9:581-98   1900 
Y 


Lewinsohn,    Joseph    L. 

Participation   of   university   professors   in 
politics.   Science   ns  39:424-6  March  20, 
1914 
RG  '10-14 

Professor  Lewinson  resigned  from  the  faculty 
of  the  University  of  North  Dakota  because  of 
the  objection  of  the  trustees  to  his  participation 
in   politics. 

Love  joy,  Arthur  Oncken,  1873- 

Academic     freedom;     discussion.     Nation 
103:561-2   Dec    14,   1916 
RG  '17 

McVey,  Frank  LeRond,  1869- 

Participation   of  university   professors   in 

politics.  Science  ns  39:424-6  March  20, 

1914 
RG  '10-14 

Preliminary  report  of  the  joint  committee 
on  academic  freedom  and  academic 
tenure.  American  Political  Science  Re- 
view 9:374-81    May,    1915 

TS 

Professor  Ordinarius,  pseud. 

Academic  freedom — a  confession.  New 
Republic    1:17-18   Jan   2,    1915 

RG  '15 

Rights  of  professors  and  students.  Inde- 
pendent 83:4-5  July  5,  1915 

RG  '15 

Scudder,  Vida  Dutton,  1861- 

Acadcmic  freedom.  Century  92:222-30 
June,   1916 

RG  '16 

Smith,  Joseph  Russell,   1874- 

Dismissing  the  professor.  Survey  35:131- 
4  Nov  6,   1915 

RG  '15 

Takes   up  the   case   of   Scott   Nearing. 

Spingarn,  Joel   Elias,   1875- 

Question  of  academic  freedom;  being  the 
official  correspondence  between  Nich- 
olas iMurray  Butler  .  .  .  and  J.  E.  Spin- 
garn .  .  .  during  the  academic  year  l9lO- 
IQll,  with  other  documents.  New  York, 
The  author  1911  53p 

NY 

Professor  Spingarn  was  dismissed  from  Col- 
umbia   University. 

Stanford,  Mrs  Jane  Lathrop,  1825-1905 
Address  on  the  right  of  free  speech,  .  .  . 
surviving  founder  of  the  Leland  Stan- 
ford iunior  university  to  the  Board  of 
trustees  of  the  Leland  Stanford  junior 
universitv  April  25,  1903.  [San  Fran- 
cisco?  1903]   24p 

LC 

StoweU,  EUery  Cory,   1875- 

Quits.  savs  Stowell  to  win  free  speech; 
Columbia  teacher  declares  that  resigna- 
tion was  influenced  by  criticism  of 
utterances.  New  York  Times  dl'. 
March  3.  1918 
Rationalism  v.  sedition.  Nation  10^:538 
Nov  15.  1917 
RG  '17 


114 


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Thomas,   Thaddeus   Peter,    1867- 

Trustees  and  professors.  Independent  71: 
907-9  Oct  26,  1911 

RG   '10-14 

Towards  academic  freedom.  Nation  106:177 
Feb   14.   1918 

Trustees  of  the  University  of  Pennsylvania 
on  academic  freedom.  School  and  So- 
ciety 2:607-8  Oct  23,  1915;  Same.  Sci- 
ence ns  42:565-6  Oct  22.  1915 

RG  '15 

Trying  to  chain  the  human  mind.  Evening 
Mail  April  15,  1920 

TS 

A  long  editorial  in  opposition  to  legislation 
pending  in  New  York  to  establish  a  loyalty  test 
for  all  schools  and  teachers,  as  a  means  of 
suppressing  teaching  of  radical  economic  and 
political    doctrine. 

University  of  Pennsylvania  and  Professor 
Scott  Nearing.  School  and  Society  2: 
20-1   July  3.   1915 

RG  -15 

Veblin,  Thorstein  B. 

Higher  learning  in  America:  a  memoran- 
dum of  the   conduct  of  universities  by 


business     men.     New     York,     B.     W. 
Huebsch   1918   198p 

Warren,  Hovirard  Crosby,   1867- 

Academic  freedom.  Atlantic  Monthly  114: 
689-99  Nov,  1914 
RG  '10-14 

Weatherly,   Ulysess    G. 

Freedom   of    teaching   in   U.S.   American 
Sociological  Society  9:133-49  Dec,  1914 
TS 

A  keen  analysis  of  the  problem  with  the 
conservative  conclusion  that  "Supertolerance  is 
perhaps  more  prevalent  in  academic  circles  than 
anywhere    else." 

Wells.  Earnie 

[Lecture.]    Crucible  3:2  Jan    18,   1920 
TS 

Reports  lecture  of  Professor  Wells  of  Wash- 
ington university.  Only  property  owners  should 
express   their  critical  opinions. 

Whipple,  Leon 

Case    of    Leon    Whipple;    statement   con- 
cerning dismissal   from    the   University 
of   Virginia.    Nation    105:690-1    Dec   20, 
1917 
RG  '18 


Part  V.     Personal  Motive 


il  D 


iscussions 


Excludes  all  "obscene  blasphemous  seditious 
libel."  Libel  on  goods  or  title  to  property, 
see  also:  Economic  motive. 

Bascom,  John 

Public  press  and  personal  right.  Educa- 
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Bax.  Ernest  Belfort,   1854- 

Problems  of  men,  mind,  and  morals.  Lon- 
don, G.  Richards,  ltd.  1912  294p 
LC  NY  TS 

Problem  of  liberty  and  libel,  P224-32.  For 
more    freedom    as    to   personal    libel. 

Bentham,  Jeremy,    1748-1832 

Elements  of  the  art  of  packing,  as  applied 
to  special  juries,  particularly  in  cases 
of  libel  law.  London,  E.  Wilson  1821 
vii,269p 

LC  NY 

Cammerhoff,  F[erdinand] 

Beleidigung  verstorbener.  Heidelberg, 
Rossler  &  Herbert  1909  59p 

NY 

Cooper,   Thomas 

A  treatise  on  the  law  of  libel  and  the  lib- 
erty  of   the   press.    New  York    1830 

[Discussion  of  the  French  law  of  libel  from 
a  report  by  M  le  Due  de  Broglie  to 
the  Chamber  of  peers  of  France  (ses- 
sion of  1818)  relative  to  the  proposed 
bill  for  regulating  the  press.]  Edinburgh 
Review  32:192-208   1819 

Y 


Dyer,   C.   M. 

The  Mirror   [magazine.]    1:[1]   June,  1907 
TS 

First  paragraph  contained  a  quotation  from 
The  Adult  by  Lillian  Harman,  on  Sex-education. 
This  marked  was  mailed  to  "Teddy  Bombastes 
Furioso,  Executive  mansion,  Washington,  D.C." 
For  this  conduct  Dyer  was  arrested,  and  later 
acquitted.  Jury  held  envelope  not  "scurrilous." 
"Obscenity"    charge   was    dropped. 

A  protest.  (Broadside)  n.p.,  n.d. 
TS 

This  was  prepared  and  printed  before  Dyer 
had  abandoned  the  idea  of  dispensing  with  law- 
yer's aid.     It  is   addressed  to  judge  and  jury. 

Eraser  on  libel.  Athenaeum  1:239  1890 
Freedom  of  the  press:  Governor  Samuel 
W.  Pennypacker's  message  approving 
the  bill  in  restraint  of  its  liberty  and 
Charles  Emory  Smith's  editorial  in  pro- 
test. [Philadelphia?  1903]  28p 
B 

General  slanders  and  how  to  meet  them. 
Living  Age  266:371-4  Aug  6,  1910 

Guernsey,  Roscellus  S. 

When    a   libel    is    not   a    libel.    Yale    Law 
Review  20:36-43  Nov,   1910 
Y 

Hudson,  Frederic 

Law  of  libel.  (In  his:  Journalism  in  the 
United  States,  from  1690-1872.  p741-57) 
New  York  1873 

NY 

Is  a  charge  of  disloyalty  or  sedition  libel- 
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1917 

TLP  '17 


FREE  SPEECH 


115 


Is  criminal  libel  freedom  of  the  press? 
Outlook  91:415-16  Feb  27,   1909 

King,  John 

Decade  in  the  history  of  newspaper  libel. 
Woodstock,  Sentinel-Review  book  & 
job   dept.    1892   50p 

NY 

Kingsdown,  Thomas  Pemberton-Leigh, 
1793-1867 
Letter  to  Lord  Langdale  on  the  recent 
proceedings  in  the  House  of  commons 
on  the  subject  of  privilege.  London, 
Charles   Hunter    1837  99p 

NY 

Law  of  libel.  Nation  48:173  1889 

Y 

Legal  and  fiscal  trammels  of  the  press. 
Westminster   Review   18:474-93   1833 

NY 

Letter  to  Henry  Brougham  upon  his  Dur- 
ham speech  [in  the  trial  of  J.  A.  Wil- 
liams for  a  libel  on  the  Durham  clergy] 
and  the  three  articles  in  the  last  Edin- 
burgh Review  upon  the  subject  of  the 
clergy.    London    1823 

Libel  as   a  crime.   Spectator  57:211-12   1884 

Libel  by  public  meeting.  Saturday  Review 
62:798-9   1886 

Y 

Libel  law.  Blackwood's  Edinburgh  Maga- 
zine  51:141-3    1842 

Y 

Libel   laws   in   France.    1819 

Libel  laws  in  U.S.  and  in  England.  Brook- 
lyn 1895 

Libels  on   "Germans."    Law  Journal  49:597 

Oct  31,  1914 
ILP  '14 
Liberty  of  criticism,   and   the   law  of   libel. 

Eraser's  Magazine  68:35-45   1863 
Y 
Masfrand,  Roger 

....  Des  infractions  de  la  presse  a  I'egard 

des  fonctionnaires  et  des  hommes  politi- 

ques      .  .  .       Montpellier,      Imprimerie 

generale  du  Midi  1911   129p 
Y 
Merrill,  Samuel 

Law    of   libel.    Writer    1:10-12;    25-8    1887 

[Mix,  James  B.] 
The  biter  bit;  or.  The  Robert  Macaire 
of  journalism;  being  a  narrative  of 
some  of  the  black-mailing  operations 
of  Charles  A.  Dana's  "Sun"  .  .  .  Wash- 
ington  1870  69p 

LC 

Newell,  Martin   L. 

The  law  of  defamation,  libel  and  slander 
in  civil  and  criminal  cases  as  admin- 
istered in  the  courts  of  the  United  States 
of  America.  Chicago,  Callaghan  &  co. 
1890   1025p 

Law  of  slander  and  libel  in  civil  and  crim- 
inal cases.  3d  ed  by  Mason  H.  Newell 
Chicago,  Callaghan  &  co.   1914  1318p 


Noyes,  Theodore  Williams,  1858- 

Newspaper  libels,  The  national  capital, 
and  notes  of  travel.  Washington,  B. 
S.  Adams,  printer  and  publisher  1894 
131p 

LC 

Newspaper  libels  and  reprinted  notes  of 
travel.  Washington,  B.  S.  Adams, 
printer   and    publisher    1894    131p 

LC 

Otis,  Harrison   Gray,   1765-1848 

Letter  to  Hon  Josiah  Quincy,  judge  of 
the  Municipal  court,  Boston,  on  the  law 
of  libel.  [Commonwealth  v.  Bucking- 
ham.] By  a  member  of  the  Suffolk  bar, 
[pseud.]    Boston   1823  62p 

B 

Pennypacker,    Samuel    Whitaker,    1843-1916 
Sensational    journalism    and    the    remedy. 
North  American  Review  190:587-93  Nov, 
1909 

Y 

Privilege  for  libelers.   Saturday  Review  65: 
642-3   1888 

Y 

Review  of  the  provisions  of  a  bill  before  the 
House  of  commons,  amending  the  existing  law 
of  libel. 

Reactionaries  at  work.  New  Review  1:164- 

6  Feb  8,  1913 
TS 

Deals  with  immigration,  political  offenders 
and  Mylius  case.  Mylius  had  been  convicted 
of  libeling   King   George   of   England. 

[Rusden,  George  William] 

Tragedies  in  New  Zealand  in  1868  and 
1881,  discussed  in  England  in  1886  and 
1887.  London,  R.  Clay  &  sons  1888  284p 

NY 

Schroeder,     Theodore     Albert,     1864-,    and 
others 
In    defense    of    free    speech;    five    essays 
from  the  Arena.  New  York,  Free  speech 
league    [1908]    24p 

TS 

Slander.   Leisure   Hour  27:453 

Slander   and    libel.    Chamber's    Journal    46: 
300-2    1869 

Y 

Slander   and   libel.    Nation    7:365-6   1868 

Y 

Smet,  J.  de 

Copie  d'une  Icttre  ecrite  a  sa  majeste  le 
roi  des  Pays-Bas,  Prince  d'Orange- 
Nassau  ...  a  propos  d'un  affreux  libelle, 
plus  fatal  a  sa  majeste  royale  qui"  a  la 
respectable  pcrsonne  contre  laquelle  il 
est  dirige.  n.t.p.   [Alost  1815]  4p 

NY 

Smith,   Charies   Emory,    1842-1908 

Freedom  of  the  press:  Governor  Samuel 
W.  Pennypacker's  message  approving 
the  bill  in  restraint  of  its  liberty  and 
Charles  Emorv  Smith's  editorial  in 
protest.    [Philadelphia   1903]    5-28p 

This    was    bill    penalizing    cartoons. 

Press:    its    liberty    and    licence.    Indepen- 
dent 55:1371-5  June   11,   1903 
B 


116 


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Smith,   Lum 

Colgate-Simmons-Comstock-Britton       so- 
cieties' abject  cowardice.  Public  Herald 
10th  year  April,  1886 
TS 

Gives  some  account  of  Smith's  arrest  for 
libeling  Britton,  a  detective  for  Mr  Comstock's 
Society    for   the    suppression    of   vice. 

Spaulding,  Henry  George 

Evil-speaking.  (American  Unitarian  as- 
sociation. Tracts,  ser.  5.  no.  21)  Boston, 
American    Unitarian    association     186-? 


B 


12p 


Specker,   Karl 

Die  personlichkeitsrechte;  mit  besonderer 
beriicksichtigung  des  rechts  auf  die 
ehre  in  schweizerischen  privatrecht. 
Aarau,  H.  R.  Sauerlander  &  cie  1910 
xiv,396p 
NY 
Stockdale,    [John  Joseph] 

Judgment  in  error  in  the  case  of  Stock- 
dale  V.  Hansard,  by  the  Court  of  Com- 
mon  Sense.   London,   Longman,   Orme, 
Brown  1840  190p 
NY 
Sutherland,  D'Loss 

Doesn't  bother  Haffer;  another  freak 
court  episode  to  live  down.  Tacoma 
Times  May  4,  1916 

Haffer  was  convicted  for  accusing  George 
Washington  of  having  slaves  and   getting  drunk. 

Turner,  G. 

How  to  treat  a  libel.    Tinsley  30:223 

Unintentional  libel.  Spectator  59:447-8  1886 

Y 

Wielding,  Carl  Johann   Friedrich   Wilhelm 

Der   justinianische   libellprocess;   ein  bei- 

trag  zur   geschichte   und  kritik  des   or- 

dentlichen  civil-processes.  Wien,   Brau- 

miiller  1865  xx,768p 

B 

Woodward,  Josiah 

Baseness  and  perniciousness  of  the  sin 
of  slandering  and  backbiting.  12th  ed 
London,  Printed  for  F.  C.  &  J.  Riv- 
ington  1818  16p 

LC  NY 

World's  account  of  Burleson  barred  from 
the  wires  by  telegraph  company  officials 
.  .  .  Burleson  orders  all  postal  tele- 
graph news  suppressed.  New  York  Eve- 
ning  World   April   23,    1919 

TS 

Deals  with  news  censorship  as  to  government 
management  of  telegraph  and  striking  teleg- 
raphers. 

Contempt  of  Court 

Atkinson,  Will 

Is  lese  majeste  a  crime  in  America? 
Should  men  be  jailed  for  free  speech? 
For  making  these  speeches  advocating 
the  impeachment  of  Federal  Judge  C. 
H.  Hanford  the  speakers  were  arrested. 
Seattle,  Wash.,  The  author  1911  32p 
TS 


Attorney's  remarks  as  to  jury,  contempt  of 
court.  Chicago  Legal  News  46:261-2 
March   21,    1914 

ILP  '14 

Beardsley,   [Samuel]   d.   1860 

Speech  ...  in  the  House  of  representa- 
tives of  the  United  States,  May  9  and 
10,  1832,  upon  the  power  of  the  House 
to  punish  for  an  alleged  contempt  and 
breach  of  privilege,  n.t.,  n.p.  [Washing- 
ton? 1832]   16p 

NY 

Boston,  Charles  A. 

Disbarment  in  New  York;  a  paper  pre- 
sented at  the  thirty-sixth  annual  meet- 
ing of  the  New  York  Bar  association, 
held  at  the  city  of  Utica,  on  the  24th 
and  25th  of  January,  1913.  Reprinted 
from  the  Thirty-sixth  annual  report  of 
the  proceedings  of  the  association. 
[1913]  113p 
TS 

Pages  17-24  deal  with  disbarment  for  crit- 
icism in  contempt  of  court.  Reprinted  from 
the  thirty-sixth  annual  report  of  the  proceedings 
of    the    association. 

[Bourne,   George] 

Case  of  Baptis  Ervine,  in  a  matter  of 
contempt  of  court;  with  an  appendix, 
by  a  gentleman  of  the  bar.  Baltimore, 
S.    Magill   1808   57p 

NY 

Caldwell,  Henry  Clay 

Trial  by  judge  and  jury.  American  Feder- 
ationist    17:385-9   May,    1910 
TS 

Deals  with  contempt  of  court  cases  and  cen- 
sorship  by   injunction   in   industrial    disputes. 

Case  of  Mr  Gompers.  Editorial  Review  June, 
1911 

TS 

Gompers  was  sentenced  for  contempt  of  court 
in  publication  in  connection  with  industrial  dis- 
pute.     Reprinted    from    the    Washington    Herald. 

Collier,  Needham  C. 

Travails  of  Missouri  Supreme  court  with 
questions  about  contempt.  [Editorial] 
Central  Law  Journal  75:201-2  Sept  13, 
1912;  Ohio  Law  Bulletin  57  Oct  21, 
1912 
ILP  '12 

Connolly,  C.  P. 

Old    and    new    attempts     to    choke    free 
speech.     Pearsons    Magazine    34:458-64 
Nov.  1915 
TS 

Contempt  of  court;  freedom  of  teaching. 
Gives  much   information   in  short  space. 

Contempt!  The  methods  of  the  American 
czars  condemned!  .  .  .  The  press,  or- 
ganized labor,  all  classes  to  the  rescue, 
.  .  .  Glowing  genesis  for  a  free  press 
movement.  .  .  .  Weekly  Star  13:[l]-2 
Sept  20,  1890 

TS 

Reports  mass  meeting  to  protest  against  con- 
viction of  James  H.  Barry  for  contempt  of 
court    in    criticising   a   judicial    decision. 


FREE  SPEECH 


117 


Contempt  by  publication.  [Note  to  United 
States  V.  Huff,  Federal  Reporter  206: 
700]  Columbia  Law  Review  14:160-2 
Feb,   1914 

ILP  '14 

Contempt  defined;  a  masterly  presentation 
of  the  law.  Weekly  Star  (Supplement) 
13:9  Sept  20,  1890 

TS 

A  lawyer's  criticism  of  the  decision  of  the 
Supreme  Court  of  California  in  the  contempt 
proceedings  against  James  H.  Barry. 
Contempt,  newspaper  publications.  Act  of 
.March  2,  1831.  [United  States  v.  Toledo 
newspaper  co.,  Federal  Reporter  220: 
459]  Georgetown  Law  Journal  3:94-6 
June,  1915 
ILP   '15 

Contempt    of    court.    Law   Journal   49:79-80 

Feb   7,    1914;    Chicago   Legal   News  46: 

334  May  23,  1914;  Ohio  Law   Reporter 

12:41-2  June    1,    1914 

ILP  '14 

Contempt   of   court.    Law    Times    133:180-1 

June  22,   1912 
ILP  '12 
Contempt  of  inferior  courts.  Justice  of  the 

Peace  76:300-1  June  29,  1912 
ILP  '12 
Contempt   of  jurv.    [Note]    American    Law 

Review  48:444  May,  1914 
ILP   '14 

Contempt  of  jury.    [From   New  York   Law 
Tournal]  Washington  Law  Reporter  41: 
644-5  Oct  3,   1913 
ILP    13 

Contempt,  schools.  Superintendent  of 
schools  not  reappointing  teachers  af- 
filiated with  labor  organization  violates 
injunction  and  is  guilty  of  contempt  of 
court.  [Frederick  v.  Owens,  reversinjg 
Owens  V.  Frederick,  Ohio  Decisions  25: 
161.  and  In  re  Frederick,  Ohio  Law  Bul- 
letin 60:81]  Ohio  Law  Bulletin  60:321 
Aug  2,  1915;  Ohio  Law  Bulletin  60:81- 
98  March  22.  1915 
ILP  '15 

Contempts.    [Editorial]    Virginia  Law   Reg- 
ister 20:149-52  June,   1914 
ILP  '14 

Cooper,  Henry 

Right  assumed  by  the  judges  to  fine  a 
defendant  while  making  his  defence  in 
person,  denied  .  .  .  London,  W.  Hone 
1821  46p 

NY 

Criminal     contempt.     [Editorial]      Virginia 

Law  Register  20:152-3  June.  1914 
ILP  '14 

Davis,   E.    G. 

That  Idaho  contempt  case.  Lawver  and 
Banker  6:265-77  Oct,  1913;  Chicago 
Legal  News  46:148,  150  Dec  13.  1913 

ILP  '13 

Editor  Leech  goes  to  jail  for  contempt  of 
court.  Literary  Digest  62:50-2  Aug  30, 
1919 


Flower,  Benjamin  Orange,  1858-1918 
In  defence  of  free  speech;  five  essays 
from  the  Arena,  and  written  by  B.  O. 
Flower,  Rev  Elliot  White,  Louis  _  F. 
Post  and  Theodore  Schroeder.  New 
York.   Free  speech  league   1908  24p 

Fox,  J.  C. 

Criminal  contempt.  Law  Quarterly  Re- 
view 30:56-65  Jan,  1914 

ILP  '14 

Gompers    contempt    case.     Chicago     Legal 
News  44:401-2  July  27,  1912 

ILP  '12 

Gregory,   S.    S. 

Courts  and  free  speech.  Illinois  Law  Re- 
view 8:141-52  Oct.  1913 

ILP  '13 

Hart,  Francis  B. 

Serious  charges  against  the  Supreme  court 
of  Minnesota;  grievances  set  forth  as 
cause  for  impeachment;  Attorney  Hart 
cites  decisions  and  demands  inquiry 
whether  they  create  just  cause  for  im- 
peachment proceedings.  St  Paul  Dis- 
patch Dec  9,  1907  pi  and  12 

TS 

For  this  criticism  of  the  Supreme  Court, 
Hart  was  punished.  See  Northwestern  Reporter 
116:212.  for  discussion.  See  subdivision.  Legal 
and  trials  herein  for  briefs. 
State  of  Minnesota,  in  the  Supreme  court, 
October  term,  1907;  in  the  matter  of 
the  application  for  the  removal  of 
Francis  B.  Hart,  an  attorney  at  law  of 
said  state.  Argument  of  Mr  Hart,  made 
in  his  own  behalf  on  the  final  submis- 
sion of  the  matter  to  the  court.  March 
10th,  1908.  Minneapolis,  Minn.,  Review 
printing  co.  n.d.  34p 

TS 

Contempt  of  court  case  decided  in  North- 
western Reporter  116:212.  See  also:  Schroeder. 
T.  in:  Growing  despotism  of  our  judiciary.  St 
Paul  Dispatch  has  a  long  article:  Hart  before 
his  accusors,  and  the  New  York  Law  Journal 
for  June  4,  IQ08  has  a  long  editorial.  The 
Arena  has  also  an  article  by  T.  Schroeder  in 
July.    1908. 

Idaho  case.  Outlook  103:151-4  Jan  25,  1913 

RG  '10-14 

"In  camera."  Canadian  Law  Times  32:776- 
80  Oct,   1912 

ILP  '12 

Law  and  the  press.  [Editorial]  Virginia 
Law  Register  20:222-6  July.  1914 

ILP  '14 

Law  of  contempt:  liberty  of  the  press  de- 
fined bv  Idaho  Supreme  court.  Lawyer 
and   Banker  6:73-81   April,  1913 

ILP  '13 

Lawyer  barred  from  court.  New  Jersey  Law 
Journal  38:157-9   May.   1915 

ILP   '15 

Liberty  imperilled  through  the  encroach- 
ments of  the  judiciary.  Arena  Feb.  1906 
pi 89-94 

TS 

Deals  with  contempt  of  court  cases,  mostly 
with  that  of  Thomas  Patterson.  See  Patterson 
V.  People  of  Colorado;  Supreme  Court  Reporter 
27:556. 


118 


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Locking  up  the  Idaho  editors.  Literary  Di- 
gest 46:122  Jan   18,   1913 

RG  '10-14 

McLemore,   Clyde 

Review  of  contempt  proceedings  by 
habeas  corpus.  [Definitions  and  juris- 
diction] Central  Law  Journal  74:152-61 
March   1,   1912 

ILP  '12 

Mosby,  Thomas  Speed 

The  Anglo-Saxon  crime.  Arena  36:373-5 
Oct,   1906 

TS 

Opposes  censorship  by  "contempt  of  court" 
proceedings. 

Nature  of  criminal  contempt.  [Note  on  In 
re  Gompers,  Washington  Law  Reporter 
39:761]  Harvard  Law  Review  25:375-7 
Feb,  1912 

ILP  '12 

Newspaper  contempt.  [Note  to  McDougall 
V.  Sheridan.  Pacific  Reporter  128:954] 
Georgetown  Law  Journal  1:177-81 
March,   1913 

ILP  '13 

Newspaper  criticism  of  the  court.  Docket 
984-6  June,  1913 

ILP  '13 

On  protecting  a  defendant  against  the  crea- 
tion of  prejudice.  American  Law  Re- 
view 30:597-601  July,  1896 

Righth  to  produce  a  play  based  upon  the 
facts   of   a   criminal   case   pending   its   trial. 

"The  crime  of  the  century"  representing  the 
murders  of  Blanche  Lament  and  Minnie  Wil- 
liams, by  Durrant,  San  Francisco.  Actors  ar- 
rested at  the  end  of  first  act,  for  contempt  of 
court  (injunction).  At  trial  judge  not  upheld 
by    Supreme    Court. 

[Patterson,  Thomas] 

Nullification  of  the  ends  of  free  govern- 
ment thru  judicial  usurpations  in  the 
interests  of  corporate  wealth.  Arena 
Sept,   1906 

For  decision  see  Supreme  Court  Reporter  27: 
556-  Deals  with  conviction  of  Thomas  Patter- 
son for  contempt  of  court  based  upon  cartoons 
which    are    reproduced   in    Arena. 

Publisher  of  a  metropolitan  newspaper  pun- 
ished for  contempt.  American  Law  Re- 
view 47:918-19  Nov,  1913 

ILP  '13 

Rodgers,  E.  C. 

Tennessee  courts  and  the  freedom  of  the 
press.  Public  22:877-8  Aug  16,  1919 
TS 

Reports  conviction  for  contempt  of  court  of 
E.  T.  Leech  of  Memphis  Press. 

Roe,   Gilbert  Ernstein,   1865- 

Our  judicial  oligarchy;  with  an  introd. 
by  Robert  M.  La  Follette.  New  York, 
B.  W.  Hucbsch   1912  xiv,239p 

Deals  incidentally  with  problem  of  contempt 
proceedings    against    critics. 

Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,   1864- 

Growing     despotism     of     our     judiciary. 
Arena  40:75-7  July,    1908 
TS 

Growth  of  judicial  despotism.  Twentieth 
Century  Magazine  2:319-24  July,   1910 
TS 


Judge  Humphrey's  apologist.  Truth  Seek- 
er 40:663  Oct  18,   1913 
TS 

Deals  with  a  case   of  censorship  by  injunction. 

Sheldon,  John  P. 

Statement  of  the  trial  of  John  P.  Sheldon, 
editor  of  the  Detroit  Gazette  ...  on  an 
attachment  for  contempt,  n.t.p.,  n.p. 
[1828]    40p 

NY 

Talbert,   R.   E. 

Review  of  contempt  proceedings  by 
habeas  corpus.  American  Law  Review 
46:838-54  Nov,  1912 

ILP  '12 

Thomas,   John   L[ilbum]    1833- 

Law  of  constructive  contempt;  the  Shep- 
herd case  reviewed.  St  Louis,  The  F. 
H.  Thomas  law  book  co.   1904  270p 

LC  TS 

Upholds  free  speech  in  thoro  criticism  of 
decision  in  re  Shepherd,  Missouri  Reports  177: 
79;  South  Western  Reports  76:79;  American 
State  Reports  99:624.  T?hat  this  criticism  had 
effect,  see  R.  R.  Gildersleeve,  Missouri  Reports 
219:170;  South  Western  Reports  118-86;  Amer- 
ican cases  16:749.  Also,  ex  parte  Creasy,  South 
Western  Reports  148:914.  See  Central  Law 
Journal    (St    Louis,    Mo.)    September    13,    1912. 

Townsend,   Charles   Cooper 

English  law  governing  the  right  of  criti- 
cism and  fair  comment.  American  Law 
Register  ns  30:517-55   1891 

Trials  in  camera.  Solicitor's  Journal  and 
Weekly  Reporter  57:494-5  May  10,  1913 

ILP  '13 


Legal  Discussions 

Action  for  words  not  libelous  in  their  nat- 
ural sense.  Solicitor's  Law  Journal  and 
Reporter   55:102-3   Dec   10,    1910 

Adams,  Elbridge   L, 

Right  of  privacy  and  its  relation  to  the 
law  of  libel.  American  Law  Review  39: 
37-58 

Y 

Advertisement  containing  portrait.  National 
Corporation  Reporter  37:428  Nov  19, 
1908 

Aspland,  L.  M. 

Law  of  blasphemy.  London  1884 

Ball,   James 

(ed.)    Libel.    (The    popular    monthly   law 

tracts,  vol.  1,  no.  2)   London  1877,  1878 
B 
Ball,  William  Valentine 

Law  of  libel  as  affecting  newspapers  and 

journalists.    London,    Stevens    &    sons, 

ltd.  1912  xiii,165p 
LC 
Barnes-Roosevelt  libel  suit.  [Editorial]  Law 

Notes   19:44  June,   1915 
ILP '15 

Bartholomew,  J. 

"Want  of  probable  cause"  in  judicial  slan- 
der. [Whether  it  must  be  put  in  issue.] 
Juridical  Review  22:132-46  July,   1910 


FREE  SPEECH 


119 


Bax,  Ernest  Belfort,   1854- 

Problems     of    men,     mind,     and     morals. 
London,  G.  Richards,  ltd.  1912  294p 
LC  NY  TS 

Biacchi,  Annibale 

Reply  to  the  libel  of  M  Francesco  Mazzo- 
leni  entitled  "Gui  la  maschera"  (unmask 
your   face).    Mexico,   "Estafette"   print- 
ing office  1866  24p 
NY 

Bound   with   his   Risposta   al   hbello   del    Sr   F. 
Mazzoleni  .  .  .  Mexico  1865. 

Risposta  al  libello  del  Sr  Francesco  Maz- 
zoleni, intitolato  "Gui  la  maschera." 
^Mexico,  J.   Moreno   1865  59p 

NY 

Black,   H.   Campbell 

Libel  of  the  dead.  American  Law  Review 
23:578-87  July,  1889 
Y 

Blount,  J.  H. 

Propaganda  of  Evaristo  Panganiban. 
[Description  of  the  province  of  Neuva 
Viscaya,  P. I.,  and  the  arrest  and  convic- 
tion of  Evaristo  for  slander  of  the 
mayor  of  the  town.]  Green  Bag  19:690- 
3  Dec,  1907 

Bom,  Ernst 

Ehrverletzung  und  schadensersatz  nach 
dem  biirgerlichen  recht  mit  riicksicht 
auf  die  geschichtliche  entwicklung. 
Greifswald,  Julius  Abel  1910  64p 

NY 

Bounds  of  legitimate  criticism  of  a  public 
officer  or  of  a  candidate  for  public  office. 
[Note  to  Putnam  v.  Browne  (Wis.) 
Northwestern  Reporter  155:910]  Central 
Law   Journal    82:126    Feb    18,    1916 

ILP  '16 

Breever,  David  J. 

Libel  address  before  the  Kansas  Bar  as- 
sociation. January  12,  1886.  Central  Law 
Journal  22:363-65   1886 
Y 

Brewerton,  William  W. 

Words   adjudged   to   be   slanderous.    Case 
and  Comment  22:478-80  Nov,  1915 
TS 

Based   only   upon   judicial    decisions. 

Burden  of  proof  in  publications  assailing 
the  character  of  a  judge.  [Editorial] 
Central  Law  Journal  79:367-8  Nov  20, 
1914 

ILP  '14 

Carr,  Frank 

English  law  of  defamation;  with  special 
reference  to  the  distinction  between 
libel  and  slander.  Law  Quarterly  Re- 
view 18:255-73.  388-99  1902 

A    scholarly   thesis. 

Charge  that  school  teacher  "courted"  his 
pupils  slanderous  per  so.  [Spears  v.  Mc- 
Coy (Ky.)  Southeastern  Reporter  159: 
611]  American  Law  Review  49:135-6 
Jan,  1915 

ILP   '15 


Charrier,   Paul 

Die    sogen;    retorsion    bei    beleidigungen 
und  korperverletzungen.  Heidelberg,  J, 
Horning  1909  142p 
NY 
Chester,    Samuel    Beach 

Anomalies  of  the  English  law;  [includ- 
ing a  satire  on  barristers  by  Charles 
Lever,  divorce,  death  and  burial,  wills, 
libel  and  slander,  imprisonment  for 
debt,  the  need  for  the  right  of  property 
in  surnames,  literary  censorship,  cap- 
ital punishment,  murder  and  suicide, 
legitimation,  criminal  appeal,  coronation 
oaths  and  declarations,  coroners,  royal 
marriages,  executions,  client,  solicitor 
and  counsel.]  Boston,  Little,  Brown  & 
CO.  1912  287p 
NY 
Child,  Richard  Washburn 

Critic  and  the  law.  Atlantic  Monthly  97: 
620-9  May,  1906 
Y 
Christie,  J.   R. 

Liability  of  publishers  of  newspapers  for 
advertisement  containing  false  state- 
ment not  ex  facie  libelous,  but  contain- 
ing an  imputation  on  character^  when 
read  by  person  acquainted  with  circum- 
stances unknown  to  publishers.  Juridi- 
cal Review  22:254-60  Oct,  1910 
Cleveland,    Arthur 

Defamation  in  the  local  and  ecclesiastical 
courts.   Law  Magazine  and  Review  40: 
271-81  May,  1915 
ILP  '15 

Cline,  F.  .    . 

Unauthorized  use  of  another's  portrait  m 
advertisements.  Kansas  Law  Journal 
17:91-7  Dec,  1910 
Copies  of  a  criminal  libel  as  separate  of- 
fenses. Columbia  Law  Review  10:150-1 
Feb,  1910 
Courtney,  James  C.  ^  ,.^  , 

Absurdities  of  the  law  of  slander  and  libel. 
American   Law   Review  36:552-64  July, 
1902 
Y 
Criminal  prosecution  for  libel;  justification. 

Bench  and  Bar  19:82-92  Dec,  1909 
Criminal     responsibility     of     a     newspaper 
proprietor  for  libel.  Law  Times  64:9o-6 
1877 
Y 
Cross,  Harold  L. 

Some   twilight   zones  in   newspaper  libel. 
Cornell    Law    Quarterly    1:238-56    May, 
1916 
ILP  '16 
Crowell,  William  Beers 

Libel   of   public   officials.   Bench   and   Bar 
ns  5:104-15  July,  1913 
ILP  '13 

Dangerous  bill;   exclusion  of  libelous  mat- 
ter from  the  mails.  Outlook  109:549-50 
March    10.    1915 
RG'15 


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1866 
Y 

Defamation  and  absolute  privilege  under  the 
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Singh  V.  The  King-Emperor,  Criminal 
Law  Record  84]  Criminal  Law  Review 
1:34-9  Feb,  1913 
ILP    13 

Defamation   of  "aliens."     Law   Journal   49: 
542-3  Sept  26,   1914;   Criminal  Law  Re- 
view  4:139-40   Nov,    1914 
ILP  '14 

Defamation  of  jurors.   [Smallwood  v.  York 
(Ky.)   Southwestern   Reporter   173:380.] 
Ohio    Law    Bulletin    60:227-8    May    24, 
1915 
ILP  '15 

Defamation  of  a   public   officer   in   a   news- 
paper. University  of  Pennsylvania  Law 
Review    57:469-72    April,    1909 
Defamatory     statements     at     meetings     of 
local  authorities.    [England.]   Justice  of 
the  Peace  73:13-14  49-50  Jan  9,  30,  1909 
Defamatory  words  in  a  will.  Austrian  Law 
Times  36:5-6  July  18,  1914;  Law  Notes 
18:77-8  July,  1914;  Washington  Law  Re- 
porter 42:473  July  24,  1914 
ILP  '14 

Defamers  by  trade.  Case  and  Comment  15: 
173-4  Jan,  1909;  Canada  Law  Journal 
45:63-4  Feb   1,    1909 

Editorial   criticism   of  the   "yellow"  journal. 
Defaming  the  memory  of  great  men.    [Ed- 
itorial]    Case    and     Comment    23:143-4 
July,  1916 
ILP  '16 
Defaming  the  play  not  the  actor.  American 

Law   Review  46:269-72   March,    1912 
ILP  '12 

Disbarment    for    vilification    of    the    court. 
[In  re   Hilton   (Utah)    Pacific  Reporter 
158:691]    Ohio    Law    Reporter    14:470-1 
Nov  6.   1916 
ILP  '16 

Disbarment  proceedings.   [Editorial]   Amer- 
ican   Law    Review   51:919-21    Dec,    1917 
ILP   '17 

Echo  of  a  famous  case.  American  Law  Re- 
view 51:945-7   Dec,   1917 
ILP  '17 

Elliott,   George 

Newspaper  libel  and  registration  act, 
1881;  with  a  statement  of  the  law  of 
libel  as  affecting  proprietors,  publish- 
ers and  editors  of  newspapers.  London, 
Stevens   &   Hoynes   1884  13p 

NYLI 

Excessive  advertising  of  property  for  tax 
sale  as  constituting  libel.  National 
Corporation  Reporter  39:327  Oct  28, 
1909 

Extension  of  defamatory  actions.  [Editorial] 
Law  Journal  45:467  July  16,  1910 

Advocates  use  of  mails  at  cost  to  encourage 
intelligence  as  against  rates  that  increase  na- 
tional  revenue. 


F.,  A.  C. 

Enjoining  the  publication   of  libels.   Cen- 
tral  Law  Journal  4:171-3    1877 
Y 

Field.  David  Dudley,  1805-1894 

Newspaper    press    and    the    law    of    libel. 
(In  his:  Speeches,  arguments,  and  mis- 
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D.  Appleton  &  co.   1884) 
Finlason,  W.  F. 

Catch  vs.  Shaen;  the  right  of  free  discus- 
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Fisher,  Joseph  R. 

Chapter  in  the  law  of  libel.  Law  Quarter- 
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Fisk,  Theophilus 

Nation's  bulwark;  an  oration,  on  the  free- 
dom of  the  press,  delivered  at  the 
Court  house  in  Danbury,  Conn.,  Wed- 
nesday, Dec  5,  1832,  on  the  liberation 
of  P.  T.  Barnum,  esq.,  editor  of  the 
Herald  of  Freedom,  from  imprisonment, 
for  an  alleged  libel;  to  which  is  ap- 
pended an  account  of  the  proceedings 
on  that  occasion,  together  with  a  letter 
addressed  to  him  while  in  prison.  New 
Haven,  Conn.,  Office  of  the  Examiner 
and  watch  tower  of  freedom  [1832]  16p 
LC  NY 

— Same.  (In  his:  Labor  the  only  true  source 
of  wealth    .  .  .   p33-9)    Charleston.    S.C. 
1837 
NY 
[Flood,  John  Charles  Henry] 

[Treatise  on  the  law  concerning  libel  and 
slander.    London    W.    Maxwell    &    son 
1880]    n.t.p.  xiv,471p 
NYLI  LC 
Folkard,  Henry  Coleman,   1827-1914 

Law  of  slander  and  libel,  founded   upon 
the  treatise  of  the  late  Thomas  Starkie, 
esq.    .  .  .  5th  ed  London,  Butterworth's 
1891 
NYLI 
Fraser,  Hugh,  1860- 

Law  of  libel  in  its  relation  to  the  press, 
together  with  the  Law  of  libel  amend- 
ment act,  1888,  and  all  previous  statutes 
bearing  on  the  subject.  London,  Reeve 
&  Turner  1889  xix,135p 
LC 

Privileges  of  the  press  in  relation  to  the 
law  of  libel.  Law  Quarterly  Review  7: 
158-73   1891 
Y 
Free  speech  for  teachers;  the  Rodman  case. 

New  Republic  3:193  June  26,  1915 
RG  '15 
Gardner,  W.  A. 

Where  writings  are  not  libelous  per  _se 
there  can  be  no  recovery  unless  special 
damage  is  alleged  and  proven.  Central 
Law   Journal  65:437   Dec  6,   1907 

Gaynor,  William  Jay 

Libel   in   England   and   America.   Century 
Magazine   82:824-31    1911 
Y 


s 


FREE  SPEECH 


121 


Giacomelli's  argument  on  libel  committed 
for  the  common  good.  Journal  of  Crim- 
inal Law  and  Criminology  3:929-31 
March,   1913 

RGS   '07-15 

Godkin,  E[dwin]  L[awrence]   1831-1902 
Libel    and    its    legal    remedy.    American 

Journal  of  Social  Science  12:69 
Slander  and  libel;  [review  of]  a  treatise 
on  the  wrongs  called  slander  and  libel, 
and  on  the  remedy  by  civil  action;  by 
John  Townsend.  2d  ed  JAnonl  1872 
American  Law  Review  6:593-613 

B   Y 

Greater  the  truth,  the  greater  the  libel. 
Canadian  Law  Times  26:394-7  June, 
1906 

Hatch,  Azel  Famsworth,   1848-1906 

(ed.)  Statutes  a.tjd  constitutional  provi- 
sions of  the  states  and  territories  of 
the  United  States  and  the  statutes  of 
England,  on  libel  and  slander,  with  sug- 
gestions of  amendments.  Brooklyn, 
N.Y.,  Press  of  Eagle  book  printing  de- 
partment  [p.  d  1895]    vi,162p 

B   LC 

Henderson,  William  Graham,    1879- 

Concise  summary  of  the  law  of  libel  as 
it  affects  the  press.  Rutherford,  N.J., 
Chemical   bank   company    1915    lifitip 

uses 

Heymann,   Eduard 

Wahrnehmung  berechtiger  interessen  im 
sinne  des  §  193  des  strafgesetzbuches. 
Greifswald,  J.  Abel  1897  43p 

NY 

Hogg,  James  Edward 

Privilege    in    defamation    actions    in    Aus- 
tralia. Journal  of  the   Society  of   Com- 
parative    Legislation     12:299-301     Mav, 
1912 
ILP  "12 

Holbrook,  Alfred  Heber 

Lawyer's  privilege  in  the  law  of  slander 
and  libel.  Albany  Law  Journal  63:191-2 
1901 
Y 

Holt.  Francis  Ludlow,  1844- 

Law  of  libel;  in  which  is  contained  a  gen- 
eral history  of  this  law  in  the  ancient 
codes,  and  of  its  introduction  and  suc- 
cessive alterations  in  the  law  of  Eng- 
land .  .  .  2d  ed  London,  J.  Butterworth 
&  son    1816  viii,302p 

NYLI 

Imputation  that  white  woman  was  colored 
as  libel.  [Name  in  directory  given  as 
"colored."]  [Jones  v.  R.  L.  Polk  &  co. 
(Ala.)  Southern  Reporter  67:577]  Law 
Notes  19:33-4  May.  1915;  Chicago  Legal 
Notes  47:360  June  12,  1915;  Virginia 
Law  Register  ns  1:155-6  June,  1915; 
National  Corporation  Reporter  50:809 
June  24,   1915 

ILP  '15 


Imputations  upon  character.  [That  a  man 
is  a  German.]  Solicitor's  Journal  and 
Weekly  Reporter  59:297-8  Feb  27.  1915; 
Irish   Law  Times  49:59  March  6,   1915 

ILP  '15 

Inquiring  as  to  plaintiffs  character  in  ac- 
tion for  defamation.  Solicitor's  Journal 
and  Review  55:39  Nov   12.   1910 

Is  a  charge  of  disloyalty  or  sedition  lib- 
elous? Canada  Law  Journal  53:382-3 
Nov,  1917 

ILP  '17 

Is  a  communication  by  a  commercial  agency 
privileged?  University  of  Pennsylvania 
Law  Review  57:178-80  Dec,   1908 

Is  it  actionable  slander  to  call  a  white  man 
a  negro?  Solicitor's  Journal  and  Re- 
porter 53:466  May   1,   1909 

Joy,   Benjamin 

True  statement  of  facts,  in  reply  to  a 
pamphlet  lately  published  by  Charles 
Barrel!,  Henry  Barrell,  George  Barrell 
and  Samuel  B.  Barrell.  Boston,  Eliot 
1816  17p 

B 

Kelly,  Richard  J. 

Law  of  newspaper  libel;  with  special  ref- 
erence to  the  state  of  the  law  as  de- 
fined by  the  Law  of  libel  amendment 
act,  1888,  and  all  preceding  acts  upon 
the  subject  and  the  full  text  of  all  the 
libel  acts  and  a  report  of  every  im- 
portant case  to  date.  London,  \V. 
Clowes  &  sons  1889  xl,258p 
LC  NYLI 
Kelsey,  Frederick  W. 

Legal  liability  of  the  "knocker."  Central 
Law  Journal  69:151-4  Aug  27,   1909 
Keysor,  W.  W. 

Is  dictation  to  a  stenographer  a  publica- 
tion  in   the  law  of  libel?   Central    Law 
Journal    70:277-8    April    15,    1910;    The 
Brief  10:87-9  May.   1910 
Kiefer,  Julius  E. 

What  damage  must  be  shown  in  action 
for  slander  and  libel?  Law  Student's 
Helper  17:206-8  July,  1909 

King,  John,   1843- 

Law  of  criminal  libel;  a  treatise  on  libel 
as  a  criminal  offense,  embracing  the 
substantive  law  and  procedure  and 
practice  in  prosecutions  by  criminal 
information  and  indictment  at  common 
law  and  under  the  Canadian  criminal 
code.  Toronto,  The  Carswell  co.  1912 
400p 
Law  of  defamation  in  Canada;  a  treatise 
on  the  statutes  of  the  Canadian 
provinces  concerning  slander  and  libel 
as  civil  wrongs,  with  the  articles  of  the 
criminal  code  of  Canada  concerning 
The  Carswell  co.  1907  xxxviii.896p 
libel  as  an  indictable  offense.  Toronto, 

NYLI 

Law   of    libel.    Cornhill    Magazine    15:36-46 
1867 

Y 


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Lewis,  William  Draper 

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ILP    '14 

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ILP  'IS 

Libelous    publication    of    plaintiff's    portrait 
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ILP    '17 

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Law  of  libel  and  slander;  the  evidence, 
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LC  NY  NYLI 

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Scandalum  magnotum   in   Upper   Canada. 
Journal    of    Criminal    Law    and    Crimi- 
nology 4:12-19  May,   1913 
ILP  '13 


Right  of  privacy  at  common  law.  Michigan 

Law  Review  8:221-2  Jan,  1910 
Right   to    a    good    name.    Outlook   90:891-2 

Dec  26,  1908 
Roosevelt,   Theodore,   1858-1919 

Disagreeable     duty.     Outlook     104:316-18 

June  14,  1913 
RG    '10-14 
Roosevelt    and    the    slanderers.    Review    of 

Reviews   48:16-18  July,    1913 
RG   '10-14 
Roosevelt's    vindication.     Current    Opinion 

55:5-6  July,  1913 
RG  '10-14 
Roosevelt's  vindication.  Literary  Digest  46: 

1321-2  June   14,   1913 
RG  '10-14 
Schreiber,    Walther 

Idealkonkurrenz  zwischen  §  185  und  §  186 

des  reichsstrafgesetbuches?   Naumburg, 

H.  Sielung  1910  x,59p 
NY 
Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,  1864- 

Presumption   and   burden   of   proof   as   to 

malice    in    criminal    libel.    New    York, 

Free  speech  league  1915  17p 
TS 

From      American      Law      Review.      49:199-216. 
March,    1915. 

Schumacher,  Karl.   1880- 

Die    schadcnsersatzpflicht   der   presse   fiir 
briefkastenauskiinfte  .  .  .  Aachen,  Aach- 
ener   verlags    und    druckereigesellschaft 
1912  46p 
LC 
Shuman,  Edwin   Llewellyn,   1863- 

Practical  journalism;   a   complete   manual 
of    the    best    newspaper   methods.    New 
York,  D.  Appleton  &  co.  1903 
HCL 

Law  of  libel,   P224-43. 

Slander  and  libel.  [Review  of  A  treatise 
on  the  wrongs  called  slander  and  libel 
...  by  John  Townshend.  New  York 
1872.]  American  Law  Review  6:593-613 
1872 

Y 

Slander  as  an  actionable  wrong.  [Increased 
public  sensitiveness  and  extension  of 
law  of  defamation.]  Australian  Law 
Times  32:12  Aug  6,  1910 

Slander  as  an  actionable  wrong.  Law  Jour- 
nal  45:85    Feb    5,    1910 

Slander  by  conduct  without  words  or  writ- 
ing. Solicitor's  Journal  53:441  April  24, 
1909;  Canadian  Law  Times  29:749-50 
Aug,    1909 

Slander  by  corporations.  [Conditions  neces- 
sary to  liabilitv.]  National  Corporation 
Reporter    40:382-3    April    28,    1910 

Slander  by  partners.  National  Corporation 
Reporter  41:441-2   Nov   17,   1910 

Slander  in  the  court  room.  [La  Porta  v. 
Leonard  (N.J.)  Atlantic  Reporter  97: 
251]  (From  New  York  Law  Journal) 
Virginia  Law  Register  ns  2:394-5  Sept, 
1916 

ILP  '16 


FREE  SPEECH 


125 


Slander  in   speech  to  jury.   American   Law 

Review  50:98-100  Jan,   1916 
ILP   '16 

Slander,  refusal  of  communion  to  church 
member.  [Carter  v.  Papineau  (Mass.) 
Northeastern  Reporter  111:358]  Uni- 
versity of  Pennsylvania  Law  Review 
64:756  May,  1916 

ILP   '16 

Slanderous  statements  by  an  agent.  [Note 
to  Nunnamaker  v.  Smith's  et  al  (S.C.) 
Southeastern  Reporter  80:465]  Central 
Law  Journal  78:154-5  Feb  27,  1914 

ILP     14 

Smith,  Jeremiah 

Jones  V.  Hulton;  three  conflicting  judi- 
cial views  as  to  a  question  of  defama- 
tion. University  of  Pennsylvania  Law 
Review  60.365-87  March,  1912 

ILP  '12 

Smith.  Samuel  Stanhope,  1750-1819 

Sermon  on  slander,  delivered  at  the 
Church  in  Brattle-Street,  Boston,  Oc- 
tober 24,  1790.  Boston,  Printed  by 
Samuel    Hall    1791    24p 

B 

Snyder,  William  Lamartine,   1848- 

(ed.)  Great  speeches  by  great  lawyers;  a 
collection  of  arguments  and  speeches 
before  courts  and  juries;  by  eminent 
lawyers;  with  introductory  notes,  an- 
alysis, etc.  New  York,  Baker,  Voorhis 
&   CO.    1881    xvi,748p 

— Same.  New  York,  Baker,  Voorhis  &  co. 
1890 

TS 

Some  new  phases  of  the  law  of  trusts  and 
of  libel.  (Slander  by  author  of  book 
which  is  rival  to  his  own.)  Bench  and 
Bar  ns  11:51-4  June,  1916 

ILP    '16 

Starkie.  Thomas.   1782-1849 

Treatise  on  the  law  of  slander  and  libel, 
and  incidentally  of  malicious  persecu- 
tions; from  the  2.  English  ed.  of  1830, 
with  notes  and  references  to  .American 
cases  ...  by  John  L.  Wendell.  Albany, 
C.  van   Benthuysen   &  co.   1843  2v 

NY 

Stephenson,  G.  T. 

Race  distinctions  in  American  law.  [How 
it  is  a  slander  to  call  a  white  man  a 
negro.]  American  Law  Review  43:29- 
52   Jan,    1909 

Theory  of  justification.  [Editorial]  Law 
Journal  45:2  Jan    1,   1910 

Towers,  Walter  K. 

Law    of   libel   as    applied    to    newspapers. 

Law  Students'  Helper  21:8-9  Jan.  1913: 

Chicago  Legal  New^s  45:199-200  Tan  25. 

1913:  New  Jersey  Law  Journal  36:103-7 

April,   1913 
ILP  '13 


Townshend,   John 

Treatise  on  the  wrongs  called  slander  and 
libel,  and  on  the  remedy  by  civil  action 
for  those  wrongs.  New  York,  Baker, 
Voorhis  &  CO.  1868  li,[17]-545p 

LC  NY 

— Same.  2d  ed  New  York,  Baker,  Voorhis 
&  CO.   1872  708p 

LC 

— Same,  to  which  is  added  in  this  edition 
a  chapter  on  malicious  prosecution.  3d 
ed  New  York,  Baker,  Voorhis  &  co. 
1877  823p 

LC 

— Same.  4th  ed  New  York,  Baker,  Voorhis 
&  CO.  1890  ci,848p 

LC  NYLI 

Ulrich,   Karl 

Die  wahrnehmung  berechtiger  interesscn 
bei  der  beleidigung  in  §  193  des  straf- 
gesetzbuchs,  insbesondere  in  der  judi- 
katur  des  reichegerichts.  Elberfeld, 
Walter  Bacmeister  1908  102p 

NY 

Unintentional  libel.  [Editorial]  Virginia 
Law   Register   17:879-80   March,   1912 

ILP   '12 

Unintentional  publication  of  a  libel.  Law 
Journal  44:114-15   Feb  20.   1909 

Unintentional  slander.  [How  far  element 
of  intention  enters  in  the  cause  of  ac- 
tion.]  Law  Journal  44:336  May  29,  1909 

U.S.  magistrates  law:  Nolan  no  Solon. 
Pearson's   Magazine  45:579   Nov,    1919 

TS 

Tells  of  conviction  of  two  men,  one  for 
criticising  President  Wilson,  the  other  for  saying 
the  mayor  of  New  York  city  was  "a  yellow 
mayor." 

Veeder,   Van    Vechten 

Absolute  immunity  in  defamation.  Legis- 
lative and  executive  proceedings.  Co- 
lumbia Law  Review  10:130-46  Feb,  1910; 
Law  Student's  Helper  17:362-8  Dec, 
1909 
(ed.)  Legal  masterpieces;  specimans  of 
argumentation  and  exposition  by  emi- 
nent lawyers.  St  Paul,  Minn.,  Keefe- 
Davidson  co.  1903  2v 
LC 

Contains  Lord  Brougham's  speech  in  defense 
of  John  Ambrose  William's  blasphemous  libel, 
1:396. 

Viereck,  George  Sylvester 

Roosevelt    book    stirs    up    hornets    nest. 
Vierecks'     American     Monthly     10:151 
July,   1919 
TS 

Tells  of  effort  to  suppress  by  patriotic  boy- 
cott  Viercck's   book    on    Roosevelt. 

Vollenhoven,  Antoni  May  van 

Relaas  en  bijiagen,  betreffende  de  proce- 
dures in  zake  .  .  .;  door  het  publick 
ministerie  te  Rotterdam,  aangeklaagd 
als  schrijver  van  zeker  tydschrift 
genaamd  .-\rlcquin,  en  deswegens  crim- 
ineel  vervolgd.  Rotterdam,  The  author 
1823  74p 

NY 


126 


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[W.,   G.] 

Remarks  upon  the  rights  and  duties  of 
jurymen,  in  trials  for  libel,  in  a  letter 
addressed  to  Jeremy  Bentham.  London, 
Reward   1831   24p 

NY 

Warning  to  newspapers.  [Editorial]  Vir- 
ginia Law  Register  19:631-3  Dec,  1913 

ILP  '13 

[Watson,  Thomas] 

How  did  the  Knights  of  Columbus  hush 
these  cases  up?  Jeffersonian  Jan  24, 
1914?   p8 

TS 

Two    men    were    induced    to    plead    guilty    to 
libeling    Knights    of    Columbus. 

What  is  fair  comment?  Law  Quarterly  Re- 
view 24:235-6  July,    1908 

When  read  together;  whether  action  for 
libel  can  be  brought  on  contents  of 
headlines  in  newspaper,  when  whole 
article  is  innocent.  Juridical  Review  20: 
263-5   Oct,   1909 

Withers,    Philip 

Alfred;  or,  A  narrative  of  the  daring  and 
illegal  measures  to  suppress  a  pamphlet 
intituled,  Strictures  on  the  declaration 
of  Home  Tooke,  esq.,  respecting  "Her 
Royal  Highness  the  Princess  of  Wales," 
commonly  called  .Mrs  Fitzherbert,  etc. 
London  1789 

Why  stop  at  Shylock.  Outlook  98:607  July 
22,  1911 

RG  '10-14 

Wig^more,   John   H. 

Trial  by  publication.  Journal  of  Criminal 
Law  and  Criminology  2:668-9  Jan,  1912 

ILP  '12 

With  how  many  people  must  a  writing  have 
a  tendency  to  disgrace  the  plaintiff,  to 
be  actionable.  University  of  Pennsyl- 
vania   Law    Review   58:44-6    Oct,    1909 

Woodin,  Glenn  W. 

Contributions  of  Mr  Justice  Gaynor  to  the 
law  of  libel  and  slander.  Bench  and 
Bar  ns   12:102-15  July,   1917 

ILP  '17 

Words  imputing  criminal  offenses.  [Action- 
able without  proof  of  special  damages.] 
Canadian  Law  Times  30:664-6  Aug,  1910 

Words  libelous  per  se.  [  Atlanta  Journal  co. 
V.  Fearce  (Ga.)  Southeastern  Reporter 
89:759[  University  of  Pennsylvania  Law 
Review  65:92  Nov,   1916 

ILP  '16 

Wrongful  use  of  name  and  picture.  [Ed- 
ison v.  Continental  chemical  co.  Fed- 
eral Reporter  220:398]  University  of 
Pennsylvania  Law  Review  63:805-6 
June,  1915 

ILP  '15 


Trials 

Action  against  insurance  company  for  in- 
serting name  of  plaintiff  in  list  of 
persons    not    insurable.    (Insuring    em- 


ployer against  loss  under  workman's 
compensation  act,  England.)  Solicitor's 
Law  Journal  and  Reporter  54:370  March 
26,    1910 

Adams,   J.    Charles 

Libel  charge  of  illegitimacy  in  a  will, 
liability  of  executor  for  publication  by 
probate.  [Note  to  Harris  v.  Nashville 
trust  CO.  (Tenn.)  Southwestern  Re- 
porter 162:584]  University  of  Pennsyl- 
vania Law   Review  62:643-7  June,   1914 

ILP  '14 

[Ames,    Samuel] 

Libel  suit  of  Chief  Justice  Ames  against 
Thomas  R.  Hazard;  Hon  Joseph  M. 
Blake  s  argument  for  defendant  upon 
plaintiff's  demurrer.  Providence,  R.I., 
A.  Crawford  Greene  1862  38p 
NYLI 

Beck,  John  Brodhead,  1794-1851,  and  others 
Report  of  the  trial  on  an  indictment  for 
libel  in  "The  American  lancet,"  con- 
taining the  whole  evidence,  speeches 
etc.  Accusers  in  behalf  of  the  state,  Drs 
J.  B.  Beck,  E.  G.  Ludlow  and  others 
against  J.  G.  Vought,  Wm.  Anderson 
and  Samuel  Osborn.  New  York  1831 
48p 

B 

Belmont,  August,   1853- 

History  of  the  libel  suit  of  Clarence  H. 
Venner  against  August  Belmont;  how 
a  plaintiff  who  had  been  called  a  prac- 
tical blackmailer  discontinued  his  suit 
for  libel  when  confronted  with  an  order 
for  his  examination  as  to  the  truth  of 
the  charge.   [New  York?  1913]    155p 

LC 

Breckinridge,  Robert  J[efferson]  1800-1871 
Second  defence  of  R.  J.  Breckinridge, 
against  the  calumnies  of  Robert  Wick- 
liffe;  being  a  reply  to  his  printed  speech 
of  November  9,  1840.  Baltimore,  R.  J. 
Matchett   1841   67p 

NY 

Brinsmade,    Peter   Allen 

Report  of  the  case  of  Peter  Allen  Brins- 
made versus  James  Jackson  Jarves,  ed- 
itor of  the  Polynesian,  for  alleged  libel- 
ous publications,  decided  upon  grounds 
of  law  by  Lorrin  Andrews.  Honolulu, 
C.   E.   Hitchcock   1846   104p 

B 

Brougham  and  Vaux,  Henry  Peter  Broug- 
ham, 1st  baron,  1778-1868 
Speech  (at  the  Durham  assizes,  August 
6.  1822)  ...  in  the  case  of  the  King  v. 
Williams  for  a  libel  on  the  clergy;  etc. 
London  1822  18p 

Brown,  John,  1784-1858 

Answers  and  defences  for  John  Brown, 
D.D.,  to  the  libel  exhibited  against  him 
by  James  Hay,  D.D.  and  Andrew 
Marshall,  D.D.  n.t.p.    [Edinburgh  1845] 

I5p 

NY 


FREE  SPEECH 


127 


Buckingham,  Joseph  Tinker,  1779-1861 
Trial.  [Commonwealth  v.  J.  T.  Bucking- 
ham, on  an  indictment  for  libel,  before 
the  Municipal  court  of  Boston,  1822.] 
Boston,  New  England  Galaxy  office 
[1822]   54p 

B 

NY 

— Same.  4th  ed  Buckingham   1830  56p 

B 

Trial,  Municipal  court,  city  of  Boston,  for 
alleged  libel  on  John  N.  Maffitt.  Boston 
1822  56p 

Buckley,    George 

(reporter)  Speeches  of  E.  W.  Evans  and 
John  Lyle  King,  council  for  the  plain- 
tiff in  the  Wilkinson-Tribune  libel  suit 
[with  the  charge  to  the  jury,  verdict, 
etc.]  Circuit  court  of  Cook  county,  De- 
cember term,  1868.  Chicago,  Rounds  & 
James    1869   92p 

B 

Burke,  Edmund,   1729-1797 

Articles  of  charge  .  .  .  against  Warren 
Hastings.  Article  XIX:  Libel  of  the 
court  of  directors.  (In  his:  Works.  9: 
228-37)  Boston,  Little,  Brown  &  co. 
1866 

NY  Y 

Butler,   Benjamin    F. 

Libel  cases.  [B.  F.  Bulter  v.  the  publish- 
er [S.  J.  Varney]  and  editor  [J.  H.  War- 
land]  of  the  Lowell  courier.]  Notice 
of   the   case   of. 

HCL 

Carr,  Sir  John 

Libel  .  .  .  report  of  the  .  .  .  case,  tried 
.  .  .  25th  July,  1808;  to  which  are  added 
several  letters  on  the  subject;  written 
by  the  Earl  of  Mountnorris,  Sir  Richard 
Phillips,  and  the  author  of  "My  pocket 
book.''  London,  Vernor,  Hood,  &  Sharpe 
1808  39p 

NY 

Case  of   Edward   F.   Mylius.    Mother   Earth 
7:370-2  Jan,    1912 

TS 

Mylius  had  libeled  King  George  of  England 
by  charging  a  morganic  marriage,  had  been 
convicted,  and  now  it  was  sought  to  deport  him 
as    an    anarchist.      See    under    Mylius. 

Chamberlin,  John  F. 

Answer  of  J.  F.  Chamberlin  to  the  com- 
plaint of  George  Wilkes,  in  an  action 
to  recover  damages  for  defamation  of 
character.  New  York,  Wm.  J.  Read  1873 
I5p 

NY 

Cheetham,  James 

Speech  of  Counsellor  Sampson  on  the 
trial  of  James  Cheetham,  for  libeling 
Madame  Bonneville  in  his  life  of 
Thomas  Paine,  with  a  short  sketch  of 
the  trial.  New  York   1810 

Cheever,   George   B[arrell]    1807-1890 

Defence  in  abatement  of  judgment  for 
an  alleged  libel  in  a  story  entitled  "In- 
quire at  Amos  Giles'  distillery":  ad- 
dressed to  the  Hon  Chief  Justice  Shaw, 


at  the  session  of  the  Supreme  judicial 
court  of  Massachusetts  held  in  Salem, 
December  4,  1835.  New  York,  Leavitt, 
Lord  &  CO.  1836  112p 

LC 

Child,  David  Lee 

Trial  of  the  case  of  the  Commonwealth 
versus  D.  L.  Child  for  publishing  in 
The  Massachusetts  journal  a  libel  on 
the  Honorable  John  Keyes  .  .  .  Boston, 
Dutton   &  Wentworth   1829   119p 

NYLI 

Cobbett,   WUliam,    1762-1835 

Action  for  a  libel  brought  by  Dr  Ben- 
jamin Rush  against  William  Cobbett, 
for  defamatory  publications  in  Porcu- 
pine's Gazette.  Philadelphia  1800 
Democratic  judge;  or.  The  equal  liber- 
tys  of  the  press,  as  exhibited,  explained 
and  exposed  in  the  prosecution  of  Wil- 
liam Cobbett,  for  a  pretended  libel 
against  the  King  of  Spain  and  his  am- 
bassador, before  Thomas  M'Kean,  chief 
justice  of  the  state  of  Pennsylvania; 
by  Peter  Porcupine,  pseud.  Philadel- 
phia, W.  Cobbett  1798  102p 

B  LC  NY  TS  Y 

For  libeling  George  III.  New  York  1810 

Coleridge,  Sir  John  Duke  Coleridge,  baron 

Coleridge,    1820-1894 
Speeches     delivered     in     the     Court     of 

Queen's  bench,  in  the  case  of  Saurin  v. 

Starr    and    another.    London,    Sampson 

Low  &  Marston   1869  151p 
B 

Cooper,  James   Fenimore 

Cooper  versus  Horace  Greeley  and 
Thomas  McElrath:  a  brief  statement  of 
the  pleadings  and  argument  in  the  case, 
with  running  commentaries  on  the  law. 
New  York   1843   16p 

Croswell,  Harry,  1778-1858 

Speeches  of  Van  Ness,  Caines,  the  attor- 
ney-general, Harrison  and  General 
Hamilton,  in  the  cause  against  Cros- 
well, on  an  indictment  for  a  libel  on 
Thomas  Jefferson,  president.  New  York, 
Printed  by  G.  &  R.  Waite  1804  78p 

B 

Dawson,  F[rancis]  W. 

Great  libel  case;  report  of  the  criminal 
prosecution  of  the  News  and  Courier, 
for  libelling  sheriff  and  ex-congress- 
man C.  C.  Bowen.  [The  state  v^  F.  W. 
Dawson.]    Charleston,    S.C,    1875   96p 

NY 

Dorrance,  John,  and  Fenner,  Arthur 

Report  of  the  case  of  John  Dorrance 
against  Arthur  Fenner,  tried  at  the 
December  term  of  the  Court  of  common 
pleas,  in  the  county  of  Providence,  A. 
D.  1801.  Added,  the  proceedings  in  the 
case  Arthur  Fenner  v.  John  Dorrance; 
compiled  from  notes  taken  by  gentle- 
men present  during  the  trial.  Prov- 
idence, R.I.,  Wheeler  1802  116p 
B  NY 


128 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Dow,   Lorenzo 

The  stranger  in  Charleston;  or,  The  trial 
and  confession  of  Lorenzo  Dow.  Boston 
1821 

Libel  on  Rev  William  Hammct.     Boston   1821. 

Eastman.  N.  L.  A. 

Open  door  to  hell;  a  brief  account  of  the 
trial  of  Bishop  Eastman;  every  article 
for  which  he  was  indicted  is  herein 
printed.  ***  Alilan,  111.  Truth  and  Light 
Publishing  House,  n.d.    [1919?] 

Between  1905  and  1908  was  indicted  five 
times  and  on  nine  counts  in  both  state  and 
U.S.  courts,  for  libel  and  obscenity.  See:  People 
V.  Eastman,  New  York  Reporter  188:478.  The 
original  articles  were  all  directed  against  Roman- 
ism, and  appeared  in  the  Gospel  Worker  for 
May  1904;  Feb.  1906;  May,  Aug.,  Sept.,  Oct., 
and    Nov.    1907.      Finally    acquitted    on    all. 

Eldon.  John  Scott,  1st  earl  of,  1751-1838 
Speech  of  the  Lord  Chancellor  [1st  carl 
Eldon]  and  judgment  of  the  House  of 
lords  .  .  .  1802,  in  the  appeal  of  John 
Morthland,  advocate,  and  John  John- 
stone, printer  in  Edinburgh,  against 
John  Cadell.  Edinburgh,  J.  Johnstone 
1802  16p 

NY 

Evans,  T[homas]   A[ndrew] 

Nelson's  sword  v.  Lord  Denman's  law;  or. 
What  is  libel?  Being  illustrations  of 
the  summing-up  of  the  judge,  the 
shrewdness  of  counsel,  the  triumph  of 
the  Times,  and  sagacity  of  the  eminent 
solicitor  of  that  impartial  journal,  as 
displayed  in  the  recent  trial  of  Evans 
V.  Lawson  for  libel  .  .  .  London,  T.  A. 
Evans  1848  45p 

NY 

Fitzpatrick,  Hugh 

Report  of  the  trial  of  Mr  H.  Fitzpatrick 
for  a  libel  upon  His  Grace  the  Duke 
of  Richmond;  by  W.  Ridgwav.  Dublin, 
Graisberry  &  Campbell  1813  105p 

NY 

Flower,  Benjamin 

Proceedings  of  the  House  of  lords  in  the 
case  of  Benjamin  Flower,  printer  of  the 
Cambridge  Intelligencer,  for  a  supposed 
libel  on  the  Bishop  of  LlandafF.  Cam- 
bridge 1800 

Gibson,  James,  1799-1871 

Report  of  trial  of  the  issues,  in  the 
action  of  damages  for  libel  in  the 
Beacon  .  .  .  Edinburgh,  A.  Constable 
&  CO.   1822  139p 

NY 

Great  Britain.  Court  of  King's  bench.  (Ire- 
land) 

Report  of  the  action  for  libel  brought 
by  the  Rev  Robert  O'Kecfife  against 
Cardinal  Cullen;  with  an  introduction 
by  Henry  Clare  Kirkpatrick.  London 
Longmans,  Green  &  co.  1874  xxxviii, 
600p 
B 

Green,  John   C. 

Trial  of  Rev  J.  C.  Green,  against  John 
Pierce    [for  slander]    together  with  the 


speech  of  James  M.  Smith,  and  a  syn- 
opsis of  John  Graham's  speech.  New 
York   1850  87p 

NY 

Haffer,   Paul   R. 

Col  Joab  defends  Washington's  name; 
gets  out  warrant  for  Paul  R.  HafTer, 
whose  letter  in  Tribune  letter  box  ac- 
cused Washington  of  drinking.  Tacoma 
Tribune    March    18,    1916 

TS 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  state  of 
Washington.  [State  of  Washington,  re- 
spondent, vs.  Paul  R.  Hafler,  appellant.] 
Appeal  from  the  judgment  of  the  Su- 
perior court  of  Pierce  county.  Appel- 
lants' brief.  Tacoma,  Wash.,  Waller 
printing  co.    [1916]    36p 

TS 

Convicted  of  libeling  George  Washington  by 
accusing  him  of  drunkenness,  profanity  and 
slave  holding.  Defendant  had  made  himself 
disagreeable  as  a  socialist.  Conviction  affirmed. 
For   other   items   see:   Personal   motive.      General. 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  state  of 
Washington.  [State  of  Washington,  re- 
spondent, vs.  Paul  R.  Haf?er,  apellant.] 
Brief  of  the   respondent.  n.p.,n.d.   23p 

See  above.  Conviction  was  affirmed.  See 
also    under    Economic.       Socialists. 

Hall,    Eunice 

Report  of  the  trial  of  E.  Hall  v.  R. 
Grant,  for  slander  .  .  .  June,  1821  .  .  . 
with  an  abridgement  of  the  arguments 
of  counsel,  and  an  appendix.  Elizabeth- 
Town,  J.  &  E.  Sanderson   1821   137p 

NY  Y 

Hamilton,   Lord   Archibald,    1770-1827 

Report  of  the  trial  by  jury  of  the  action 
of  damages  for  a  libel  in  the  Beacon 
newspaper.  Edinburgh,  J.  Robertson 
1822  lS4p 

NY 

Hatchard,  John.    1764-1849 

Report  of  the  trial  of  the  King  v.  J. 
Hatchard,  for  a  libel  on  .  .  .  Sir  James 
Leith  .  .  .  Feb  20,  1817,  together  with 
Mr  Justice  Bayley's  address  in  pro- 
nouncing the  sentence  of  the  court. 
London,   Whitmore    &    Fenn    1817    134p 

NY 

Hay,  James,  and  Marshall,  Andrew 

Libel  at  the  instance  of  Drs  Hay  and 
Marshall  against  Dr  J.  Brown,  n.t.p. 
[Edinburgh   1845]    lip 

NY 

Howe,  J. 

For  defamation  of  Rev  S.  Russell.  Wor- 
cester 1831  27p 

Hunter,    [Robert]    1823-1897 

Great  libel  case.  [Dr  Hunter  v.  Pall  Mall 
Gazette.]  Being  a  verbatim  report  of 
the  medical  evidence  given  by  Dr  Wil- 
liams [and  others]  etc.  showing  their 
opinions  on  the  nature,  causes  and  cure 
of  consumption,  with  explanatory  re- 
marks bv  Dr  Hunter,  the  plaintiff.  Lon- 
don, C.  Mitchell  &  CO.  1867  404p 

NY 


FREE  SPEECH 


129 


Jack,  Guy,  1853- 

Captain  Guy  Jack's  Iconoclast  being  an 
exposure  of  hypocritical  Christians  and 
corrupt  Jews  of  murder,  arson,  rob- 
bery, perjury,  forgery  and  bribery  of 
officials  and  private  citizens  in  Kemper 
and  adjacent  counties  in  Mississippi, 
whose  efforts  have  been  to  defeat  Jus- 
tice— all  graphically  disclosed  by  the 
author  who  figured  personally  in  the  fu- 
rious fires  of  human  greed  for  filthy 
lucre,  and  felt  the  scathing  flames  of 
hellish  persecution  dealt  out  by  men 
claiming  to  be  his  friends  and  fellow 
sympathizers.  3d  ed  The  first  having 
been  burned  in  an  effort  to  destroy 
testimony  which  would  have  disgraced 
the  author's  enemies.  [Scooba,  Miss. 
1919]   For  the  author  107p 

TS 

This  is  probably  the  most  extraordinary  col- 
lection of  libels  ever  published  in  the  same 
space,  giving  names,  dates  and  details.  Also 
a  brief  account  of  civil  and  criminal  libel  pro- 
ceedings brought  on  previous  exposure  of  part 
of  the  same  allegations.  6o  murders  are  charged 
against  wealthy  citizens  and  many  other  crimes 
not    included    in    the    title    page. 

Prosecution  scores  two  hits  as  witnesses 
deny  imputations  in  Guy  Jack  criminal 
libel  trial.  New  Orleans  Item  no.  292:2 
April  3,  1919 
TS 

Trial  for  publishing  Captain  Guy  Jack's  Icon- 
oclast.     Acquitted. 

Trial    of    Captain    Guy    Jack    brings    big 
court   room   down   in   laughter  as   both 
sides    score    in    repartee.    New    Orleans 
Item  no.  291:2  April  2,  1919 
TS 

Report  of  trial  for  criminal  libel  in  publish- 
ing   Captain    Guy   Jack's    Iconoclast. 

Kingan,   [John] 

Report  of  the  trial  by  jury,  in  the  counter 
actions  of  defamation  and  damages, 
Kingan  versus  Watson  .  .  .  and  also 
of  the  proceedings  under  the  motion 
for  a  new  trial;  to  which  are  prefixed 
observations  on  Mr  Kingan's  case.  Edin- 
burgh, Caledonian  mercury  press  1828 
206p 
NY 

Knowles, 

Libel   suit  of  Knowles  v.   Douglass,   1748 
and  1749.   [Reprinted  from  the  Publica- 
tions of  the   Colonial   society  of  Mass. 
v3]    Cambridge   1899  31p 
HCL 

Leslie,  John,  1766-1832,  v.  Blackwood,  Wil- 
liam, 1776-1834 
Report  of  the  trial  by  jury,  Prof  John 
Leslie  against  W.  Blackwood,  for  libel 
in  Blackwood's  Edinburgh  Magazine 
.  .  .  July  22,  1822.  Edinburgh,  W.  &  C. 
Tait  1822  161p 

NY 

Liberty  of  the  press!  Sir  John  Carr  against 
Hood  and  Sharpe  [book-sellers].  Re- 
port of  the  above  case  ...  to  which 
are  added  several  letters  on  the  sub- 
ject, written  by  the  Earl  Mountmorris, 


Sir    Richard    Phillips,    and    the    author 
of    "My    pocket     book."     London,     W. 
Wilson  1808  39p 
NY  TS 

Sir  John  Carr  claimed  to  have  been  criminally 
libeled  by  defendant's  ridicule  of  Sir  John's 
book.  Another  account  of  this  trial,  said  to  be 
inadequate,    is    published. 

Little,  Joseph  J. 

Statement  of  facts  regarding  the  indict- 
ment for  criminal  libel,  found  by  the 
grand  jury  against  Nicholas  Murray 
Butler,  and  others,  upon  complaint  of 
J.  J.  Little.  New  York  1899  23p 

NY 

Littlejohn,  De  Witt  C[linton]  v.  Greeley, 
Horace,  1811-1872 
Littlejohn  libel  suit  .  .  .  containing  the 
rulings  of  Judge  Bacon,  the  arguments 
.  .  .  New  York,  Tribune  association  1861 
112p 

NY 

Loomis,  Horatio  N. 

Report  of  the  trial.  [The  people  v.  Dr 
Horatio  N.  Loomis,  for  libel.]  Tried  at 
the  Erie  county  oyer  and  terminer, 
June,  24,  1850;  Justice  Mullett  presiding. 
Buffalo,  N.Y.,  Press  of  Jewett,  Thomas 
&   CO.    1850  50p 

LC  NY 

Lyman,  Theodore,  jr. 

Report  of  a  trial  in  the  Supreme  court, 
holden  at  Boston,  Dec  16  and  17.  1828, 
of  T.  Lyman,  jr.,  for  an  alleged  libel 
on  Daniel  Webster  .  .  .  comprising  all 
the  documents  and  testimony  given  in 
the  cause,  and  full  notes  of  the  argu- 
ments ...  By  J.  W.  Whitman.  Boston, 
Putnam  &  Hunt  1828  76p 
NY  Y 

MacClellan,  [M'Clellanl,  George,  1796-1847 
Report  of  the  trial  of  an  action  in  which 
Dr  Geo.  M'Clellan  was  plaintiff,  and 
Dr  Francis  S.  Beattie  was  defendant, 
at  Philadelphia,  March,  1829;  compris- 
ing the  whole  of  the  evidence  and  the 
judge's  charge;  with  notes,  subjoined 
by    an    eye    witness.    Philadelphia    1829 


B 


78p 


Mackintosh,  Sir  James 

Speech  in  behalf  of  Jean  Peltier,  indicted 
for  a  libel  against  Napoleon  Bonaparte. 
(In:  Howell's  State  Trials.  27:566;  and 
Great  speeches  by  great  lawyers.  p567- 
612) 

NY 

M'Loughlin,  Peter,  v.  Boyle,  Philip 

[The  trial  of  an  action  for  slander, 
brought  bv  Philip  Boyle  against  the 
Right  Rev' Peter  M'Loughlin  .  .  .  tried 
at  Lefford  assizes  ...  on  the  21st  of 
March.    1809.]    n.t.p..   n.p.    lOlp 

NYLI 

Magee,    John 

Trial  of  John  Magee.  for  publishing  an 
historical  review  of  the  Duke  of  Rich- 
mond's   administration    in    Ireland    .  .  . 


130 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Magee,  John  — Continued 

to  which  is  prefixed,  A  report  of  sev- 
eral motions,  grounded  on  Mr  Magee's 
affidavit,  to  postpone  his  trial,  until 
Michaelmas  term.  Dublin,  J.  Magee  1813 
171p 

NY 

Merrick.  Fred  H. 

Acquit  Merrick  of  libel;  editor  of  Justice 
legally  right  in  prison  expose  .  .  .  pros- 
ecution tries  to  compromise  when  Mar- 
ron  threatens  to  lift  lid.  New  York  Call 
4:[1]  Nov  3,  1911 
TS 

Criminal  libel  case  against  Justice  fails; 
conditions  in  western  penitentiary  are 
shown  to  be  degrading;  Marron  refused 
to  bring  out  more  disgusting  facts. 
Free  Press  4:[1]  Dec  2,  1911 
TS 

Graft,  unlawful  convict-labor,  sodomy  and 
great    cruelty    were    charged. 

Release  from  jail.  Justice  Jan  20,  1912 
TS 

Served  4  months  for  criticising  courts  in 
dealing  tenderly  with  "capitalist"  criminals,  as 
compared    with    labor    radicals. 

Miller,  Silvanus 

Report  of  the   trial   of  an  action   on   the 
case,    brought    by    Silvanus    Miller    .  .  . 
against  Mordecai  M.  Noah  .  .  .   for  an 
alleged  libel.   New  York  1823   72p 
B 

Noah,  Mordecai  Manuel,  1785-1851 

Report  of  the  trial  of  an  action  on  the 
case,  brought  by  Sylvanus  Miller,  esq., 
late  surrogate  of  the  city  and  county 
of  New-York,  against  Mordecai  M. 
Noah, esq.,  editor  of  the  National  advo- 
cate, for  an  alleged  libel.  Tried  at  the 
City-hall,  in  the  city  of  New-York,  be- 
fore the  Circuit  court  held  in  the  first 
judicial  district  in  the  state  of  New- 
York,  by  his  honor  Samuel  R.  Betts, 
esq.,  on  Friday,  the  12th  day  of  De- 
cember, 1823.  By  L.  H.  Clarke.  New- 
York,  Printed  by  J.  W.  Palmer  and  co. 
1823  72p 

LC 

Op  dyke,  George 

Full  metrical,  juridical  and  analytical  re- 
port of  the  Extraordinary  suit  for  libel 
of  George  Opdyke  "verses"  Thurlow 
Weed  ...  By  a  full  corps  de  bully,  short 
and  long  metre  reporters.  New  York 
1865  62p 
B  NY 

Great  libel  case.  [George  Opdyke  v.  Thur- 
low Weed.]  A  full  report  of  the  speeches 
of  counsel,   testimony,   etc.    New  York, 
American   news   co.    1865    156p 
B  NY 

Peltier,  Jean   [Gabriel] 

Trial  of  John  Peltier  for  a  libel  against 
Napoleon  Buonaparte  .  .  .  21st  of  Feb- 


ruary, 1803.  London,  Cox  son  &  Baylis 
1803  xxxii,312p 
NY 

Philippine  Islands.  Court  of  first  instance 
for  judicial  district  of  Manila.  Part  IV 
Decision  of  Judge  J.  C.  Jenkins  ...  in 
the  action  for  damages  brought  by  Dean 
C.  Worcester  against  .  .  .  the  news- 
paper known  as  "El  Renacimiento  y 
Muling  Pagsilang."  n.t.p.  [Manila  1908] 
24p 

NY 

Physician  giving  to  medical  association 
names  of  patients  who  w^ere  slow  to 
pay,  whether  guilty  of  libel.  [Note  to 
McDonald  v.  Lee  (Pa.)  Atlantic  Re- 
porter 92:135]  Law  Notes  18:194  Jan, 
1915;  Washington  Law  Reporter  43:65 
Jan  29,  1915;  Chicago  Legal  News  47: 
288  April  10,   1915 

ILP  '15 

Proceedings  on  the  trial  of  a  special  action 
on  the  case,  by  James  Webster  Wedder- 
burn  Webster,  and  Lady  Frances  Car- 
oline Webster  Wedderburn  Webster, 
his  wife,  against  Charles  Baldwin,  for 
a  libel  ...  the  16th  of  February,  1816. 
London,  J.   Ridgway  1816  51p 

NY 

Prynne,  William,  1600-1669 

Documents  relating  to  the  proceedings 
against,  in  1634  and  1637,  with  a  bio- 
graphical fragment  by  John  Bruce; 
edited  by  S.  Rawson  Gardiner.  London 
1877 

Rush,  Benjamin,  1745-1813 

Report  of  an   action  for  a   libel   brought 
by  Dr  Benjamin  Rush,  against  William 
Cobbett    .  .  .    Philadelphia,    Printed    by 
W.  W.  Woodward  1800   [70] p 
Y 

Full  account  of  the  libel  suit  Rush  v. 
Cobbett.  Rush-Light  no.  4  March  31, 
1800 

Russell,  Samuel 

Trial    of   the   action   in    favor   of   Samuel 
Russell  of  Boylston  against  John  Howe 
of   Boylston,   for  defamation   .  .  .    1831. 
Worcester  1831  27p 
HCL 

Sampson,    [William] 

Speech  of  Counsellor  Sampson,  on  the 
trial  of  James  Cheetham,  for  libelling 
Madame  Bonneville,  in  his  Life  of 
Thomas  Paine;  wath  a  short  sketch  of 
the  trial.  New  York,  C.  Holt  1810  27p 
NY 

Scott,   Andrew 

Report  of  a  trial  ...  for  an  alleged  libel: 
in  the  case  of  Rev  A.  Scott,  Roman 
Catholic  priest,  versus  William  Mc- 
Gavin,  author  of  a  work  entitled  The 
Protestant,  and  others.  Glasgow,  Uni- 
versity press  182-140p 
NY 


FREE  SPEECH 


131 


Shepherd,  Alexander  R. 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  District  of 
Columbia,   January    18,    1875.    [Suit    for 
libel;  Alexander  R.  Shepherd  v.  White- 
law  Reid.]  n.p.  1875  91p 
NY 

Smith,  Mortimer  J. 

Important  and  interesting  trial  of  M.  J. 
Smith,  on  an  indictment  for  libel  on 
Miss  Emma  Williams,  for  having  con- 
nected her  name  with  the  separation  of 
David  Groesbeck  from  his  wife  .  .  .  1847 
.  .  .  New  York  1870  39p 

NY 

Spencer,  Ambrose,  1765-1848 

In  the  court  for  the  trial  of  impeach- 
ments and  corrections  of  errors.  [Am- 
brose Spencer,  plaintiff,  and  Solomon 
Southwick,  defendant.]  Case  on  the 
part  of  the  plaintiff,  n.t.p.  [New  York 
1812]    16,8p 

B 

Stockdale,  John,   1749?-1814 

Trial  of  John  Stockdale  for  a  libel  against 

the    House    of    commons,    before    Lord 

Kenyon,  in  the   Court  of  king's  bench. 

Richmond,  Printed  by  S.  Pleasants,  jr. 

1804  38p 
LC  NY 

Accusation  based  upon  certain  passages  con- 
cerning the  impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings 
and  concerning  the  Commons  of  Great  Britain, 
contained  in  a  pamphlet  published  by  Stockdale, 
entitled  "A  review  of  the  principal  charges 
against  Warren  Hastings,  late  governor  gen- 
eral  of   Bengal." 

Speech  of  Mr  Erskine,  counsel  for  the  de- 
fense,   PS-3S- 

Storey,  Moorfield,  1845- 

Libel  suits  of  Frank  P.  Bennett  vs.  John 
Donohoe  and  Hastings  &  sons  pub- 
lishing CO.;  closing  argument.  [Boston 
1902?]  37p 

B 

Stow,  Joshua 

Report  of  the  case  of  J.  Stow  vs.  S.  Con- 
verse, for  a  libel;  containing  a  history 
of  the  two  trials  before  the  superior 
court,  and  some  account  of  the  proceed- 
ings before  the  Supreme  court  of  er- 
rors. New  Haven,  S.  Converse  1822 
183p 
NY 

Strong.    Demas 

The    Strong-Bennett   libel    suit;    Supreme 
court,  King's  county  circuit,  n.t.p.  151p 
B    NY    NY  LI 

Taylor,   John 

Report  of  the  trial  of  the  cause  of  J. 
Taylor  vs.  E.  C.  Dclavan,  prosecuted 
for  an  alleged  libel  .  .  .  Albanv,  Hoff- 
man, White  &  Visscher  1840  48p 

NY   Y 

Thacher,  Moses 

Report  of  the  case  of  Rev  Moses  Thacher 
[sic]  vs.  Gen  Preston  Pond,  for  slander 


in  charging  him  with  committing  the 
crime  of  adultery.  Dedham  Patriot  and 
Boston   Times   1838  31p 

B 

Review  of  the  case  of  Moses  Thacher  ver- 
sus Preston  Pond,  in  charging  the  plain- 
tiff with  adultery;  including  letters  of 
Mrs  Jerusha  M.  Pond.  Boston  1838  95p 

B 

[Thatcher,  Charles  A.] 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  state  of 
Ohio;  brief  on  behalf  of  Mr  Thatcher. 
Toledo,   O.,   Ames-Kiebler  co.   n.d.  87p 

Disbarred  in  Ohio  State  Reporter  80:493; 
Ohio  State  Reporter  83:246.  Legislature  rein- 
stated him.  See  Roe:  Our  Judicial  oligarchy 
196-204. 

Thomson,  Samuel 

The  law  of  libel;  the  report  of  the  trial 
of  Dr  Samuel  Thomson,  the  founder 
of  the  Thomsonian  Practice,  for  an  al- 
leged libel  in  warning  the  public  against 
the  impositions  of  Paine  D.  Badger,  as 
a  Thomsonian  physician  sailing  under 
false  colors.  Boston  1839 

Two  trials  of  Foote,  Ramsey  and  Kemp, 
for  blasphemous  libel  in  the  Christmas 
number  of  the  Freethinker.  London 
1883 

Tytler,  William  Eraser 

Jury  court;  issues  in  the  cause  in  which 
W.  F.  Tytler  is  pursuer,  and  L.  Mackin- 
tosh defender,  n.t.p.  [Edinburgh  1822] 
131,31p 

NY 

Upham,  Timothy 

Report  of  the  case  of  Timothy  Upham 
against  Hill  &  Barton,  publishers  of  the 
New  Hampshire  Patriot,  for  alleged 
libels,  at  the  court  of  common  pleas, 
Rockingham  countv,  1830.  Dover,  N.H. 
G.  W.  Ela  1830  159p 
B  NY 

Varma,   Babu   Ishwari  Prasad 

(comp.)  Hyderabad  sensational  case; 
complete  and  detailed  proceedings  of 
the  well-known  pamphlet  scandal  case, 
with  full  speeches  of  the  counsels. 
Lucknow,  [India]  G.  P.  Varma  & 
brothers  press  1893  579p 
NY 

Vassall.  William 

Massachusetts  Bay— Superior  court 
(1757).  [State  of  the  action  brought  by 
William  Fletcher  against  William  Vas- 
sall for  defaming  him.]  Tried  in  the 
Superior  court  at  Boston  .  .  .  1752  .  .  . 
Boston   1753  39p 

HCL 

Vaughan,   Bernard 

In     the     High     court    of    justice.    King's 

bench    division   ...   2d   June.    1902   .  .  . 

Vaughan  v.  Rock  Newspaper  printing  & 

publishing  co.,  ltd.    .  .  .  n.t.p.    [London 

1902?]  64p 
NY 


132 


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Whiting,  James;  Parsons,  John,  and  Con- 
greve,  William 
Trial  of  J.  Whiting,  J.  Parsons,  and  W. 
Congreve,  for  a  libel  against  the  Hon 
G.  C.  Berkeley  .  .  .  June  27th,  1804  .  .  . 
together  with  the  letters  and  papers 
which  are  referred  to  in  the  course 
of  the  trial.  Buckingham,  J.  Sceley  1804 
132p 

NY 

Williams,  Benjamin  W. 

Report  of  the  trial  of  B.  W.  Williams  and 
others,  editors  and  printers  of  the  Dew 
Drop,  a  temperance  paper  published  at 
Taunton,  Mass ,  for  an  alleged  libel 
upon    William    Wilbar,    a    rumseller    of 


B 


Taunton,  before  the  Supreme  court  at 
New  Bedford,  1845.  Taunton,  Mass., 
Hack  &  King  1846  60p 


Williams,  John  Ambrose 

Trial  for  libel  on  the  clergy,  contained 
in  the  Durham  Chronicle  of  August  18, 
1821  .  .  .  including  a  report  of  the  pre- 
liminary and  subsequent  proceedings 
.  .  .  2d  ed  Durham.  J.  A.  Williams  1823 
65p 

NY 

Wooler,  T.  J. 

A  verbatim  report  of  the  two  trials  of  Mr 
T.  J.  Wooler,  editor  of  the  Black  Dwarf, 
for   alleged  libels.   London   1817 


Part  VI.     Religious  Motive 


General 

No   date    was   found   for   the   following. 

Allin,  Thomas 

Fighters  and  martyrs  for  the  freedom  ot 
faith.  Boston  and  Chicago,  Pilgrmi 
press 

uses 

Birch,  Una 

Secret  societies  and  the  French  revolu- 
tion together  with  some  kindred  studies. 
London,  John  Lane  244p  . 

Religious    liberty    and    the    French    revolution, 
pi  I  i-8o. 
Chicago's  blackest  scandal,  n.p.,  n.d.  4p 
TS 

Tells  of  suppression  of  anti-Catholic  discussion. 

Coffin,  Charles  C. 

Story  of  liberty.  .  . 

This  is  the  scarce  first  issue  containing  tne 
chapters  on  the  Roman  Catholic  church,  sup- 
pressed  in   later    issues. 

F   S    A. 

Suppression     of     the     monastries     under 
Henry  VIIL  (Extracts  from  a  work  on 
Fnglish  monastries,  by  F.  S.  A.)   Lon- 
don, Catholic  truth  society  16p 
TS 
Fiske,  Amos  Kidder 

Protest   against  dogma.   Forum  9:66-77 
Gerard,  John 

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Leland,  John,  1754-1841 

Right  of  conscience  inalienable  and  there- 
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by  law;  or  the  high-flying  church-man 
stript  of  his  legal  robe,  appears  a  yaho. 
New  London,  Conn.,  Printed  by  T. 
Green  &  son  1791  29p 

Macdonald.   George  E. 

Letter  to  solicitor  Lamar.  New  York 
Broadside 

Republished  from  The  Nation,  Oct.  5,  1918. 
Also  another  document  [editorial  from  Truth 
Seeker?]  Both  deal  with  suppression  of  Truth 
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Mangasarian,  M.  M. 

Persecution!  or,  The  attempt  to  suppress 
freedom  of  speech  in  Chicago.  Chicago, 
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TS  .  ^      , 

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assembly  for  free  thinkers,  by  hall   owners. 

Martyrs  of  Rome.  Part  1,  First  and  second 

general    persecutions.    Dublin,    Catholic 

truth   society  n.d.  28p 

TS 

Historical  treatment   as  to   early   Christians. 

Morris,  J.  .       , 

The  English  martyrs,  why  they  died,  why 
they    suffered,   what   sort   of   men    they 
were.    London,    Catholic    truth    society 
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Owen,  Robert  Dale,    1801-1877 

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tract  and  a  warning,  n.t.p.,  n.d.  22p 
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Proceedings  of  the  Society  for  suppression  of 
vice,  pi 28-35;  Toleration,  p  196-202;  Persecuting 
bishops,  P3S6-6;  Judge  that  smites  contrary  to 
law;   535-40.     Sometimes  caustic  on  vice  hunters. 

Beecher,  Henry  Ward 

Dissuasive  from  moral  intolerance,  de- 
livered at  Bloomington,  Ind.,  before  the 
Philomathean  Society  of  the  Indiana 
university.  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  S.  V.  B. 
Noel  1845  31p 

NY 

Brook,  Benjamin 

Memoir  of  the  life  and  times  of  Thomas 
Cartwright,  the  distinguished  Puritan 
reformer  including  the  principal  ecclesi- 
astical movements  in  the  reign  of  Queen 
Elizabeth.  London    1845 

Donatelli,    Giuseppe 

Sopra  il  tema  proposto  dalla  R.  Ac- 
cademia  di  scienze,  lettcre  od  arti  di 
Modena  ne'  seguenti  termini:  Dimos- 
trare  co'  migliori  argomenti  i  mali  della 
stampa  licenziosa,  ed  i  vantaggi  della 
ben  regolata:  e  quindi  la  necessita  di 
una   savia   censura.    [Modena   1845]    23p 

LC 

Tweedie,  W.   K. 

Select  biographies;  edited  for  the  Wood- 
row  society  chiefly  from  the  manu- 
scripts in  the  library  of  the  faculty  of 
advocates.  Edinburgh,  Woodrow  society 
1845  2v 

Gives  brief  historical  account  of  numerous 
persocutions    during    17th   century. 


FREE  SPEECH 


137 


Dussant,  fimile 

Essai    sur    la    tolerance    religieuse;    these 
presentee    a    la    Faculte    de    theologie 
protestante  de  Strasbourg  le  31  juillet 
1846.  Strasburg,  Dannbach  1846  50p 
B 

Jacoby,  Andre 

De   la   liberte  de   I'eglise   a  propos   de   la 
liberte  d'enseignement.  Paris  1846 
HCL 

Sull'   edito    15    Marzo',    1847.    [Roma    1847] 

7p 
B 

This  edict  related  to  the  censorship  of  books. 
The  title  is  on  the  cover. 

Row,  William 

Life  of  Mr  Robert  Blair,  minister  of  St 
Andrews,  containing  his  autobiography 
from  1593-1636,  with  supplement  to  his 
life,  and  continuation  of  the  history  of 
the  times  to  1680;  ed.  for  the  Woodrow 
society  from  the  original  manuscript 
by  Thomas  M'Crie.  Edinburgh,  Printed 
for  the  Woodrow  society  1848 

Williams,   Roger,   ca   1606-1683 

Bloudy  tencnt  of  persecution  for  cause 
of  conscience  discussed;  and  Mr  Cot- 
ton's letter  examined  and  answered; 
edited  for  the  Hansard  Knollys  society 
by  Edward  Bean  Underbill.  London,  J. 
Haddon  1848  439p 

NY  TS  Y 

The  biographical  introduction  by  Mr  Under- 
bill gives  an  interesting  account  of  the  efforts 
of  Roger  Williams  to  establish  intellectual  and 
religious  freedom. 

This  is  the  beginning  of  religious  liberty  in 
America  and  first  American  defense  of  Jefferson's 
conceptions  of  the  limits  of  toleration. 

See  Schroeder,  T.  Constitutional  free  speech, 
chap.  21. 

— Same;  edited  by  S.  L.  Caldwell.  (Reprint 
in  Narragansett  club.  Providence.  Prov- 
idence,  R.L   1867  v3) 

Y 

1850-1860 

Flores   Alatorre,   Agustin 

Contcstacion  dada  al  supremo  gobicrno 
...  en  el  espediente  instruido  en  el 
Ministerio  de  Justicia  y  negocios  eclesi- 
asticos,  sobre  la  prohibicion  hecha  por 
el  Sr  Vicario  Capitular  de  este  Arzo- 
bispado  de  varias  obras  anti-catolicas 
e  immorales,  y  entre  ella  la  intitulada 
Misterios  de  la  inquisicion.  Mexico  1850 
29p 

NY 

Hunt,  Frederick  Knight,  1814-1854 

Fourth  estate:  contributions  towards  a 
history  of  newspapers,  and  of  the  lib- 
erty of  the  press.  London,  D.  Bogue 
1850  2v 

B  LC  NY  TS  Y 

Historical  treatment. 

Mayer,  Brantz,  1809-1879 

Calvert  and  Penn;  or,  The  growth  of 
civil   and    religious   liberty  in   America, 


as  disclosed  in  the  planting  of  Mary- 
land and  Pennsylvania:  .  .  .  delivered 
in  Philadelphia  before  the  Pennsylvania 
historical  society,  8  April,  1852.  [Balti- 
more, Printed  for  the  society,  by  J.  D. 
Toy   1852]   49p 

LC  Y 

Muston,  A. 

Israel  of  the  Alps:  a  history  of  the  per- 
secutions of  the  Waldenses.  London 
1852  312p 

Penn,  WUliam,   1644-1718 

Janney,  S.  M.  Life  of  William  Penn  with 
selections  from  his  correspondence  and 
autobiography.  2d  ed  rev  Philadelphia, 
Lippincott  Grambo  &  co.  1852  576p 

Woolrych,  H.  W. 

Life  of  Judge  Jeffreys,  chief  justice  of 
the  King's  bench  under  Charles  II  and 
lord  high  chancellor  of  England  during 
the  reign  of  James  II.  Philadelphia 
1852  316p 

Baudoixin,  Alexandre 

Anecdotes  historiques  du  temps  de  la 
Restauration  suivies  de  recherches  sur 
I'origine  de  la  presse,  son  developpe- 
ment,  son  influence  sur  les  esprits,  ses 
rapports  avec  I'opinion  publique,  les 
mesures  restrictives  apportees  a  son 
exercise.   Paris,   Didot  freres   1853   172p 

Castro  y  Rossi,  Adolfo  de 

History  of  religious  intolerance  in  Spain; 
tr.  by  Thomas  Parker.  London  1853 

Eliot,   Samuel.   1821-1898 

History  of  liberty.  Boston,  Little,  Brown 
&  CO.   1853  4v 

LC  TS 

Plumer,  William  Swan 

Rights  of  conscience;  a  report  presented 
to  the  General  assembly  of  the  Presby- 
terian church  in  the  United  States  of 
America,  May,  1853.  Philadelphia  1853 
46p 

B 

Underwood,  Joseph   R. 

Report  of  the  committee  on  foreign  rela- 
tions to  whom  were  referred  numerous 
petitions  praying  for  the  adoption  of 
such  measures  as  may  secure  to  our 
citizens  residing  in  foreign  countries 
the  right  freely  and  openly  to  worship 
God  according  to  the  dictates  of  their 
own  consciences.  (Appended  to  his  re- 
port on  the  memorial  of  the  American 
peace  society,  etc..  Ipl4-16.  1853  32d 
Cong.  2d  sess.  Sen.  Rep.  com.  418) 
HCL 

Has  religion  anything  to  do  with  our  col- 
leges? n.t.p.   [New  York  1854?]   31p 
NY 

Religious  liberty  and  protection  to  Amer- 
ican citizens  abroad;  great  public  meet- 
ing at  New  York,  Jan  26,  1854.  Sup- 
plement to  the  February  number  of  the 
American  and  foreign  Christian  union. 
New  York   1854  64p 

HCL 


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Munger,   Theodore    T[homton]    1830-1910 
Freedom  of  faith.  Boston  and  New  York, 
Houghton,  Mifflin  &  co.   1883  vi,397p 
LC  TS 

Tries  to  increase  intellectual  hospitality  by 
showing  that  there  is  really  no  conflict  between 
believing  in  an  imminent  God  and  a  personal  one; 
in  believing  in  natural  law  and  miracles,  verbal 
inspiration  and  reflected  inspiration  of  the  biblical 
authors. 

New  Jersey.    Legislature 

Celebration  of  the  bi-centennial  anniver- 
sary of  the  New  Jersey  legislature, 
1683-1883.  Trenton,  N.J.,  Naar,  Day  & 
Naar,  Printers  to  the  House  of  assembly 
1883  55p 
Reinkens,  J.  H. 

Lessing   iiber    toleranz;    eine    erlauternde 
abhandlung   in   briefen.    Leipzig   1883 
HCL 


FREE  SPEECH 


141 


Utilitarian  theories  of  persecution.  Saturday 

Review    55:307-9    1883 
Y 

Editorial  review  of  Leslie  Stepheh's  "The  sup- 
pression of  poisonous  opinions." 

Great  Britain.  Court  of  Star  chamber 

Decree  of  Star  chamber  concerning  print- 
ing; made  July  11,  1637.  Reprinted  by 
the  Grolicr  club,  from  the  first  edition 
by  Robert  Barker,  1637.  [New  York, 
Press  of  T.  L.  De  Vinne  &  co.  1884] 
[83]p 

LC 

Holland,   Frederic   May,    1836-1908 

Rise  of  intellectual  liberty  from  Thales 
to  Copernicus.  New  York,  Henry  Holt 
&  CO.  1885 

SchafF,  Philip,   1819-1893 

Development  of  religious  freedom.  (In 
his:  Christ  and  Christianity,  p276-91. 
New  York,  Charles  Scribner's  sons 
1885) 

HCL 

Daly,  John   Bowles 

Radical  pioneers  of  the  eighteenth  cen- 
tury. London,  S.  Sonnenschein,  Le  Has 
&  Lowrey   1886  xi,252p 

LC  TS 

Chapter  3.  Wilkes  and  liberty;  chap.  5. 
Home  as  a  reformer;  chap.  6.  Liberty  of  the 
press;  chap.  7.  Radicals  in  action;  chap.  8. 
Radical  leaders;  chap.  12.  Government  persecu- 
tion; chap.  13.  English  political  societies;  chap. 
14.     Paine  in  France — close  of  Home's  career. 

Brooks,  Phillips,  1835-1893 

Tolerance:  two  lectures  addressed  to  the 
students  of  several  divinity  schools  of 
the  Protestant  Episcopal  church.  New 
York,  E.  P.  Dutton  &  co.  1887  lllp 

B  HCL  NY  Y 

"Tolerance  is  a  disposition.  Toleration  is  the 
behavior"  resulting.     Considers  only  the  first. 

— Same.  London,  Macmillan  &  co.   1887 

TS 

Cian,  Vittorio,   1862- 

Un  episodio  della  storia  della  censura 
in  Italia  nel  secolo  XVI.  L'edizione 
epurgata  del  Cortegiano.  (In:  Socicta 
storico  lombardo.  Serie  seconda,  v4, 
amio    14  661-727p)    Milano   1887 

B  Y 

Spencer,  Theodore  C. 

Strugfi-le  for  religious  and  political  lib- 
erty. New  York,  Truth  Seeker  co. 
[1887]   140p 

TS 

Covers  a  wide  range  in  superficial  historical 
discussion. 

Hastings,  H.  L. 

Few  cold  facts  concerning  preaching  on 
Boston  common,  presented  at  a  public 
hearing  in  the  City  hall,  before  a  com- 
rnittee  of  the  City  council  on  the  peti- 
tion to  repeal  the  city  ordinance  pro- 
hibiting the  unlicensed  preaching  of  the 
gospel  on  the  public  grounds  of  the  city 
of  Boston;  Wednesday  evening,  Feb- 
ruary 29,  1888.  Boston  and  London, 
Scriptual  tract  repository  n.d.  [1888] 
12p 
TS 


Janmart  de  Brouillant,  L6once,  1862- 
Liberte  de  la  presse  en  France  aux  XVII* 
et  XVIIP  siecles;  histoire  de  Pierre  du 
Marteau,  imprimeur  a  Cologne  (XVII*- 
XVIIP  siecles),  suivie  d'une  notice  d' 
un  livre  intitule:  Histoire  des  amours 
du  Grand  Alcandre  ...  A  Paris  de  I'im- 
primerie  de  la  veusve  Jean  Guillemot 
.  .  .    Paris,    Maison    Quantin   1888   324p 

LC  NY 

Prime.  Wendell 

Fifteenth  century  Bibles:  a  study  in  bib- 
liography. New  York,  A.  D.  F.  Ran- 
dolph  1888  94p 

Pages    1822   give   information   concerning  sup- 
pression of  Bibles. 
[Fisk?] 
The  beginning  of  New  England;  or,  the 
Puritan    theocracy    in    its    relations    to 
civil  and  religious  liberty.  Boston  1889 

Henry,  William  Wirt 

Reply  to  Dr  Stille  upon  religious  liberty 
in  Virginia.  (Papers  of  the  American 
historical  association.  3:457-64)  [New 
York  1889] 

HCL 

IngersoU,'  Robert  G.,  and  Coudert,  Freder- 
ick R.,  with  Woodford,  Stewart  L. 
Limitation  of  toleration;  a  discussion 
between  Col  Robert  G.  IngersoU,  Hon 
Frederick  R.  Coudert,  Ex-Governor 
Stewart  L.  Woodford,  before  the  Nine- 
teenth century  club,  of  New  York,  at 
the  Metropolitan  opera  house.  New 
York,  Truth  Seeker  co.  n.d.   [1889]  44p 

See  also:  Dresden  edition  of  Ingcrsolls  com- 
plete works. 

Jones,  Alonzo  T[revier] 

Civil  government  and  religion;  or,  Chris- 
tianity and   the   American   constitution. 
Chicago,  American  Sentinel  1889  176p 
NY 
Randall,    Richard   William 

Life  in  the  Catholic  church,  its  blessings 
and  responsibilities;  with  a  preface  on 
the  trial  of  Bishop  of  Lincoln.  London, 
W.  H.  Allen  &  co.  1889  xv,349p 

Rider,  Sidney  S[mith] 

An  inquiry  concerning  the  origin  of  the 
clause  in  the  laws  of  Rhode  Island 
(1719-1783)  disfranchising  Roman  Cath- 
olics. (Rhode  Island  historical  tracts, 
2d  ser.)  Providence,  R.I.,  The  author 
1889   72p 

Roberts,   William 

Earlier  history  of  English  bookselling. 
London,  S.  Low.  Marston,  Searle  & 
Rivington    1889  341p 

Pages  24  to  30  give  some  account  of  censor- 
ship in  the  i6th  century.  Page  101  tells  of  proc- 
lamation of   1680   against  unlicensed  printing. 

Graves,   Thomas 

Historical  sketch  of  the  conflicts  between 
Jesuits  and  Seculars  in  the  reign  of 
Elizabeth,  with  a  reprint  of  Bagshaw's 
True  relation  of  the  faction  begun  at 
Wisbech,  and  illustrative  documents. 
1889 


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A    Rabbi    on    religious    liberty.    American 
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TS 

Continued  in  the  following  number  of  the 
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NY 

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Venetian  printing  press,  an  historical 
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Chapters  7-g  discuss  laws  for  protection 
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TS 

Defends    Catholics    as    promoters    of    religious 
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Onahan,   William   J. 

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TS 

Rabaud,    Camille 

Sirvcn;  etude  historiquc  sur  I'avenement 
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Miirtyrer  des  freien  denkens  aus  alter 
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PAR 

Fletcher,  C[harles]  R[obert]  L[eslie]   1857- 
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NY 

Jones,  Alonzo    Trevier 
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Lauer,    Paul    E. 

Church  and  state  in  New  England.  Balti- 
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Montaigne,  Michel  de,  1533-1592 

Essays;  tr.  by  Charles  Cotton;  ed.  with 
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TS 

Of  liberty  of  conscience,  2:123-8. 

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PAR 

Arndt,  August 

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PAR 

Coleman,   Leighton 

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Civil  and  religious  liberty  m  America. 
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NY 

Holyoake,   George   Jacob,    1817-1906 

Sixtv  vears  of  an  agitator's  life.  London, 
T.'  F.  Unwin  1893  2v 

LC  TS 

Murphy,   Joseph  J.  .  .       ,    r       , 

Natural  selection  and  spiritual  freedom. 
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FREE  SPEECH 


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Wagener,  Auguste 

Liberie  de  conscience  a  Rome.  Bruxelles 

1893  64p 
HCL 

DoUinger,  Johann  [Joseph]  Ignaz  von,  1799- 
1890 
Addresses  on  historical  and  literary  sub- 
jects; in  continuation  of  "Studies  in 
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HCL 

Contains.   The   history   of   religious    freedom. 

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Jefferson,  Thomas,  1743-1826 

Notes  on  the  state  of  Virginia;  reprint 
of  the  original  edition  of  1784;  with  the 
additions,  corrections  and  illustrations, 
added  by  the  author  in  all  subsequent 
editions;  ed.  by  Paul  Leicester  Ford. 
Brooklyn,  M.Y.  Historical  printing  club 

1894  325p 
LC 

Relicfious  liberty,  P228-35. 

MacDonald,  George  M. 

Thumbscrew  and  rack;  torture  imple- 
ments employed  in  the  XVth  and 
XVIth  centuries.  For  the  promulgation 
of  Christianity.  New  York,  Truth 
Seeker   co.    1894  25p 

TS 

Mcllwaine,  Henry  R[ead] 

.  .  .  Struggle  of  Protestant  dissenters  for 
religious  toleration  in  Virginia.  Balti- 
more. Johns  Hopkins  press  1894  67p 

LC   NY   Y 

Putnam,  Samuel  P. 

400  j'cars  of  freethought.  New  York, 
Truth  Seeker  co.   1894  864p 

TS 

In  the  course  of  many  biographies  gives  much 
information  about  modern  persecution  upon  all 
subjects   from    Mesmerism   to   sex-reform. 

Sunderland,  Jabez  Thomas 

Sectarianism:    its    evils,   causes   and    cure. 
..•\nn    Arbor   1894   16p 
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Allier,  Raoul 

Pour    I'histoire    dc    la    liberie    de    penscr. 
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Creighton,  Mandell,   1843-1901 

Persecution  and  tolerance.   (Hulsean  lec- 
tures.   1893-4)    New   York  and   London, 
Longmans.    Green    &    co.    1895    xii.HOp 
B  NY 
Ditchfield,   Peter  Hampson,   1854- 

Books  fatal  to  their  authors.   London,  F. 
Stock    1895   xx.244p 
LC  NY  TS 

Contents:  Theology:  Fanatics  and  free- 
thinkers: Astrology,  alchemy  and  magic;  Sci- 
ence and  philosophy:  History;  Politics  and  states- 
manship; Satire;  Poetry;  Drama  and  romance; 
Booksellers  and  publishers;  Some  literary  mar- 
tyrs:  Index. 

Historic.il  tre.itment. 


Dolan,  J.  G. 

Nine    of    our    martyrs,    beatified    in    1895. 
London,  Catholic  truth  society  n.d.  28p 
TS 

Deals     with     English     persecution     of     Roman 
Catholics. 

Jones,  Alonzo  Trevier 

Rights  of  the  people;  or.  Civil  govern- 
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378p 

B 

Kawerau,  G. 

tjber    lehrverpflichtung    und    lehrfreiheit. 
Zeitschrift  fiir  praktische  theologie   17: 
240-65  1895 
PAR 

Lamennais,  Hugues  F[elicite  Robert]   de 

Essay  on   indifference   in   matters   of  reli- 
gion;   tr.    by    Lord    Stanley    of   Alderly. 
London,  J.   Macqueen   1895   xl,300p 
LC 

Draper,  John  WUliam,   1811-1882 

History   of   the   conflict   between   religion 
and  science.  New  York,  D.  Appleton  & 
CO.   1896  xxii,367p 
TS 

Gee,    Henry,    1858-,    and    Hardy,    WUliam 

John,   1858- 
Documents  illustrative  of  English  church 

history;    comp.    from    original    sources. 

London  and  New  York,  The  Macmillan 

CO.   1896  xii,670p 
LC 

King,  Henry  Melville 
Summer  visit  of  three  Rhode  Islanders  to 
the  Massachusetts  Bay  in  1651;  an  ac- 
count of  the  visit  of  Dr  John  Clarke, 
Obadiah  Holmes  and  John  Crandall, 
members  of  the  Baptist  church  in  New- 
port, R.I.,  to  William  Witter  of  Swamp- 
scott.  Mass.,  in  July  1651:  its  innocent 
purpose  and  its  painful  consequences. 
Providence,  R.I..  Preston  &  Rounds  co. 
1896  vi,[7]-115p 

LC  Y 

Powell,   B. 

Smith    the   censor.    Free    Review   5:337-51 
Jan,   1896 
TS 

Describes    the    unofficial    censorship    of    British 

tuwsstands. 

Straus,  Oscar  Solomon,   1850- 

Religious    libertv    in    the    United    States. 
New  York,   B.'  Cowen   1896 
HCL 

Boudinhon. 

Nouvelles    regies    sur   Tinterdiction    et   la 

censure    dcs    livn  s.    Can    Contemp    p20 

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Hart.    Albert    Bushnell 

(ed  )  .American  history  told  by  contem- 
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Pages    38J-87.   The   trial    of   a    woman    Antino- 
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Das  kirchliche  biicherverbot.   Preussische 
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PAR 

Leo  XIII,  Pope   (Giovanni  Vincenzo  Raf- 
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PAR 

Putnam,  George  Haven,  1844- 

Books  and  their  makers  during  the  Mid- 
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the  production  and  distribution  of  lit- 
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Rider,  Sidney  S[mith] 

Soul  liberty;  Rhode  Island's  gift  to  the 
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86p 
NY  RIHS  TS  Y 

Discredits  Catholic  claim  of  having  first  estab- 
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Schroeder.  Theodore  Albert,  1864- 

Comfort  for  [Mr]  Monk;  Free  Lance  so- 
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TS  .     .      , 

Resolution  of  350  words,  on  constitutional 
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Vindex,   pseud. 

Perfect   law   of   liberty;    a   plea   for   free- 
dom of  thought  in  the  service  of  faith. 
London,   G.  Redway  1897  9-123p 
TS 

Contains  general  appeal  for  open-mindedness — 
duty  of  inquiry  in  matters  religious. 

White,   Andrew   Dickson,    1832-1918 

History   of    the   warfare    of    science    with 
theology    in    Christendom.    New    York, 
D.  Appleton  &  co.  1897  2v 
TS 

Gives  historical  data  on  religious  opposition  to 
intellectual  freedom  and  progress. 

Howard,  George  Broadley 

Rise  and  progres  of  Presbyterianism; 
with  appendixes  on  toleration  and  unity, 
London,  J.  Hodges  1898  210p 

Shufeldt,    Robert    Wilson,    1850- 

Morality  and  the  newspapers.  Boston  In- 
vestigator 68:2  Aug  6,  1898 

Criticises  the  Washington  Post  for  publishing 
the  teachings  of  T.  De  Witt  Talmadge  and  J.  E. 
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guides  for  school  children  and  others,  and  assert- 
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Smith,  Sydney,   1771-1845 

The  Rev  Sydney  Smith  on  the  English 
Society  for  the  suppression  of  vice. 
New  York,  G.  H.  Richardson  &  son 
1898 

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Abbot,  Francis  Ellingwood 

Sectarianism;  or,  Inclusiveness  and  ex- 
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Bumichon,  Joseph 

Liberte  d'enseignement.  Etudes  Publiees 
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II   Congresso   di   Lione 

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Locke,  John,  1632-1704 

Works  of  John  Locke,  including  An  essay 
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education,  and  an  essay  on  the  value 
of  money,  new  ed,  carefully  rev  London 
and  New  York,  Ward,  Lock  &  co. 
[1899?]  xvi,649,722p 

LC 

Volume  one  and  two,  fourteenth  edition  of  his 
Essay  concerning  human  understanding.  Lon- 
don 1753- 

Pigge,    Heinrich 

Die     religiose      toleranz     Friedrich     des 
Grossen    nach    ihrer    theoretischen   und 
praktischen   seite.   Mainz   1899 
HCL 
Popper,  William 

Censorship    of    Hebrew    books    .  .  .    New 
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156p 
NY  Y 
Targile,  Paul 

Esprit  nouveau  et  neutralite.  Etudes  Pub- 
liees par  des  Peres  de  la  Compagnie  de 
Jesus  80:800-12;  81:57-70  1899 
La  neutralite  de  I'enseignement  superieur 
dans  I'universite.  Etudes  Publiees  par 
des  Peres  de  la  Compagnie  de  Jesus 
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Torau-Bayle,  X. 

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1900-1910 

Blace,  Joseph  de  ,      .         .  , 

Liberte  de  Tenscignement  et  1  universite. 
Etudes  Publiees  par  des  Peres  de  la 
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1842- 
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France   depuis   I'fidit   de   Nantes  jusqu' 

a  juillet   1870.   Paris,   F.  Mean    1900  vi, 

263p 
B  Y 
Holland,    Frederick   May,    1836-1908 

Sketches    of    the    progress    of    freedom. 

Boston,    Boston    investigator    co.    1900 

75p 
HCL 

James,    Charles   Fenton 

Documentary  history  of  the  struggle  for 
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LC 

Krause,    Ernest 

Unshackling  of  the  spirit  of  inquiry.  Open 
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TS 

Lezius,  Friedrich 

Tolcranzbcgrifif    Lockes    und    Pufcndorfs; 
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HCL 

St  John,  Wallace 

Contest  for  liberty  of  conscience  in  Eng- 
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B  Y 

Abbott,  Lyman,  1835- 

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HCL 

Locke.  John,   1632-1704 

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London.  Cassell  &  co.  ltd.   1901   192p 
LC  TS 
Points  of  history:  The  Inquisition;  The  Al- 

bigenses  and  the  Waldenses;  The  mas- 
.  sacre  of  St  Bartholomew;  The  fifth   of 

November     or     the     gunpowder     plot; 

Galileo   and    the    Inquisition;    Religious 

toleration  a  question  of  first  principles. 

Reprinted     from     the     London     edition 

Boston,  Marlicr  &  co.  1901  260p 
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Ruffini,  Francesco,   1863- 

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LC  TS 

In  spite  of  thoro  study  of  the  past  the  author 
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Hauser,    Henri 

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et  devant  la  raison.  Revue  Politique  et 
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Plumptre,  Constance  E. 

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Watts  &  CO.  1902  117p 
LC  TS 

Historical  and  general  speculative  treatment 
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Gallonio,   [Father] 

Tortures  and  torments  of  the  Christian 
martyrs  from  "De  SS.  Martyrum  Cru- 
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(London]  Published  for  subscribers 
1903 

Johnson,  Lucian 

Religious  liberty  in  Maryland  and  Rhode 
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TS 

King,   Henry   Melville 
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Providence.  R.L,  Preston  &  Rounds  co. 

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LC 
Pioneers    of    religious    liberty    in    America. 

Boston,  American  Unitarian  association 

1903 

Scorraille,  R.  de  .         , 

Le  projct  de  loi  Chaumie  contre  la  liberte 

d'enseignement     I'cgalite     des     grades. 

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Williams,   Roger,   1604?-! 683 

(ed.)  Fourth  paper  presented  by  Major 
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Parliament,  for  the  propagating  the 
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R.L  Club  for  colonial  reprmts  1903  xxui, 
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B  NY  Y 

Bolles,  John  Rogers,  and  Williams,  Anna  B. 
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lished annals  belonging  to  the  colonial 
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Roman  index  and  its  latest  historian;  a 
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Lord's  freeman.  Spectator  101:665-6  Oct  31, 

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RGS  '07-15 

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its  relations  to  personality  and  to  science,  its 
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L'intolcrancc  religieusc  et  la  politique, 
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Ferrer  y  Guardia,  Francisco,  1859-1909 
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tr.  by  Joseph  McCabc.  N.Y.  and    l.on- 
don,  Putnam  1913  147p 

Chapter  14,  A  defensive  chapter.  Chapter  17, 
The  closing  of  the  Modern  school.  It  was  for 
the  work  of  this  school  primarily  that  Terrer  was 
subsequently  condemned   to  death. 

Graham-Barton,  A. 

Development   of   religious   liberty.    West- 
minster  Review   180:326-30  Sept,    1913 
RG  '10-14 

Haynes,   E.    S.   P. 

Taboos  of  the  British  museum  library. 
English  Review  16:123-34  Dec,  1913 

Gives  specific  information  of  library  censorship 
and  criticises  the  same. 

Hegarty,  William  J. 

The  struggle  for  religious  liberty  in 
Germany.  American  Catholic  Quarterly 
Review  38:203-27  April,   1913 

Lambert,  W.  A. 

Libcrtv    in    teaching.    Nation    97:11    July 
3.  1913 
RG  '10-J4 

Menace  publishing  company,  and  others 
In  the  District  court  of  the  United  States; 
western  district  of  Missouri,  south- 
western division,  no.  253  [United  States, 
plaintiff,  vs.  The  menace  publishing 
company,  a  corporation,  Wilber  F. 
Phelps,  Bruce  M.  Phelps,  Theodore  C. 
Walker  and  Marvin  Brown,  defendants.] 
Brief  of  defendants  on  motion  to  quash 
and  on  demurrer.  Kansas  Citv,  Mo., 
Smith-Grieves  [1913]  200p 

TS 

Indicted  for  issues  of  The  Menace  for  May 
2.  19:4;  May  16,  1914;  Jan.  24,  1014;  July  i8, 
1014;  July  2S,  1014;  Aug.  T.  1014;  and  for  the 
hook  by  Father  Crowley;  The  Pope,  Chief  of 
White  ."^lavcrs.  High  Priest  of  Intrigue;  all  al- 
letrod  to  be  "obscene",  court  over-ruled  the  de- 
murrer, but  jury  found  matter  not  obscene  and 
acquitted  all  defendants. 

Mental    science    condemned    by    law.    Law- 

ver   and    Banker   6:155-9  June.    1913 
ILP  '13 


Pringle,  Cyrus  Guernsey,  1838-1911 

United  States  versus  Pringle:  record  of  a 

Quaker    conscience.    Atlantic    Monthly 

111:145-62  Feb.   1913 
RG  '10-14 

Religious  liberty,  by   F.   RufTmi.   [Review.] 

Nation  96:84-5  Jan  23.  1913 
RG   '10-14 

Religious  liberty  in   the    Balkans.   Indepen- 
dent 75:361-2  Aug  14,  1913 
RG  '10-14 

Roberts.  R. 

Tyranny  of  intolerance.  Rationalist  Press 
Association   annual    1913 

Robertson,  John  M. 

Growth  of  tolerance;  security  from  per- 
secution is  found  only  in  absence  or 
decav  of  religious  belief.  Truth  Seeker 
40:817-18  Dec  27,  191,3 

Vermeersch,    Arthur 

Tolerance;  translated  by  W.  Humphrey 
Page.  London,  R.  &'T.  Washbourne 
1913    ix,374p 

Weber,  Bertram  L.,  1886- 

Chicago's  fight  for  free  speech;  right  to 
speak  against  the  Knights  of  Columbus 
and  the  ignorant,  brutal  Irish  police 
force  in  Chicago  upheld — efforts  of 
Secular  union  make  it  possible  for  a 
man  to  express  his  opinion  in  that 
'priest-ridden  city,  by  Franklin  Steiner. 
Menace  no.  140  Dec  20,  1913 

TS 

Gives  full  account  of  several  cases  in  which 
Weber  was  arrested  for  freethought  lectures,  de- 
nouncing Catholicism.  Charge  speaking  on  streets 
without  a  permit.     Weber  sustained  by  courts. 

Wendte,  Charles  William,  1844- 

Ced.)  Freedom  and  the  churches:  the  con- 
tributions of  American  churches  to  re- 
„ligious  and  civil  liberty.  Boston.  Mass. 
American     Unitarian     association     1913 
114p 

uses 

Academic  freedom  at  Lafayette  college  and 
the  University  of  Washington,  Educa- 
tional   Review  47:313-16   March,    1914 

RG   "10-14 

Chamberlain,  John  D. 

Disturbing   religious    meetings.    Case   and 
Comment  20:518-20  Tan,  1914 
ILP  '14 

Freedom  of  teaching.  Independent  77:146-7 

Feb  2.  1914 
RG  '10-14 

Garvie,   A.    E. 

Nonconformity:    its    ideals    and    historv. 

Constructive    Quarterlv    2:476-86    Sept. 

1914 
RGS  '07-15 

Gunn.  John  Edward,  1863- 

Liberty  of  conscience.  New  York,  .^mer- 
ira   press    1914 

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150 


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Lecky,  WUliam  Edward  Hartpole,  1838-1903 

History  of  the  rise  and   influence  of  the 

spirit  of  rationalism   in   Europe,   rev  cd 

New    York   and    London,    D.    Applcton 

&  CO.    1914  2v 

LC  NY 

On  persecution,  1:353-405;  2:1-99.  Historical 
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— Same,  rev  ed  2v   New  York,   Daniel  Ap- 

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Literature  of  dissent,  1660-1760.  (In:  Cam- 
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RGS  '07-15 

M'Laren,  A.  D. 

Creeds,  heresy  hunting  and  secession  in 
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Journal  12:721-32  July,  1914 

[Watson,  Thomas  E.]    1856- 

Claude  L'Engle's  paper,  Dixie,  is  against 
free  speech  on  the  streets.  JefTcrsonian 
Jan  24,  1914  p6 
TS 

L'Engle  is  criticized  for  demanding  suppression, 
of  street-speaking  especially  against  Catholic 
church. 

Academic  freedom  in  Utah.  New  Republic 
4:274-5  Oct  16,  1915 

RG  '15 

Askowith,  Dora,   1884- 

Toleration  and  persecution  of  the  Jews 
in  the  Roman  empire;  pt.  1.  The  toler- 
ation of  the  Jews  under  Julius  Caesar 
and  Augustus.  New  York,  Bloch  pub- 
lishing   company    1915    xiii,236p 

Colligan,  James   Hay 

Eighteenth  century  nonconformity.  New 
York,  Longmans,  Green  &  company 
1915  viii,175p 

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Corbin,  John 

Tyranny  of  police  and  press.  (In:  Shaw, 
B.,  and  Corbin,  J.  Author's  apology.  p5- 
19)    New   York,    Brentano's    1915   66p 

Repririted  from  N.Y.  Sun,  Nov.  5,  1905.  Gives 
and  criticizes  police  commissioner's  excuse  for 
suppression,  including  "besmirches  sacredness  of 
a    clergyman's    calling." 

Cross-currents  of  anti-Roman  Catholic  con- 
troversy in  the  United  States.  Current 
Opinion  58:347-8  May,   1915 

RG  '15 

Flower,  Benjamin  Orange,  1858-1918 

(ed.)  Patriot's  manual,  dealing  with  the 
irrepressible  conflict  between  two  mutu- 
ally exclusive  world  theories  of  govern- 
ment; a  compendium  of  facts,  historical 
data,  reasons  and  present-day  chron- 
icles, showing  why  every  friend  of 
fundamental  democracy  must  oppose 
politico-ecclesiastical  Romanism  in  its 
un-American  campaign  to  make  Amer- 
ica "dominantly  Catholic."  Fort  Scott, 
Kan.,  Free  press  defence  league  [1915] 
xii,244p 

LC 


Huss,  John 

Schafif,  D.  S.  John  Huss;  his  life,  teach- 
ings and  death,  after  five  hundred 
years.  New  York  and  London,  Charles 
Scribner's  sons  1915  xv,349p 

Robertson,  John  M. 

Short  history  of  free  thought  ancient  and 
modern.  3d  ed  rev  and  expanded  Lon- 
don,  Watts   &   CO.    1915   2v 
TS 

Gives  historical  information  of  persecution  and 
the  development  of  intellectual  hospitality. 

Rome    would,  still    burn    heretics.    Menace 

Aug  28,  1915 
TS 

Gives  quotations  of  Catholics  against  larger 
tolerance. 

Schaff,  David  Schley,   1852- 
John  Huss;  his  life,  teachings  and  death, 
after  five  hundred  years.  New  York  and 
London,    Charles    Scribner's    sons    1915 
xv,349p 

Watson,  Thomas  E.,  1856- 

How  the  liberty  of  the  press  is  attacked 
in  the  Watson  case.  Jeflfersonian  12:1-4 
Dec  9,   1915 

Opening  speech  to  the  jury  of  Mr  Wat- 
son: what  defence  is;  says  he  took  up, 
in  his  drastic  Roman  Catholic  hierarchy 
great  points  for  democratic  and  Prot- 
estant point  of  view  against  monarch- 
ical and  hierarchical  points  of  view. 
Jeflfersonian  12:1  Dec  2,  1915 

.  Watson  was  being  tried  and  was  ultimately  ac- 
quitted on  charge  of  "obscene"  exposure  of 
Catholic  confessional. 

Zollman,  Carl  Frederick  Gustav 

Disturbance  of  religious  meetings  in  the 
American  law.  American  Law  Review 
49:880-903   Nov.   1915 

Alger,  Francis 

Haverhill     rioting;     the    "demonstration" 
against  freedom  of  speech  approved  by 
certain   Catholics.   Truth   Seeker  43:310 
May   13,   1916 
TS 

Romanists  created  a  riot  to  prevent  Thomas 
Leyden  from  delivering  an  anti-Romanist  lecture 
in  a  hall. 

Case  against  the  Menace:  the  Italian  Pope's 
eflfort  to  destroy  the  freedom  of  the 
press.  Jeflfersonian  Jan  6,  1916 

TS 

Coleman,   William   H.,    1871- 

Religious  liberty.  Washington,  Congres- 
sional Record  53:5618-20  March  25, 
1916 

Do  present  plans  endanger  our  religious  lib- 
erties? symposium.  Religious  Education 
11:259-76  June,    1916 

RGS   '16 

Ekholm,  Augustus  Conrad 

Paganism  v.  Americanism;  or,  The  truth 
about  Romanism.  Atlantic  City,  N.J., 
Beacon   publishing  company   1916  64p 

uses 


FREE  SPEECH 


151 


[Flower,  Benjamin  Orange,  1858-19181 
Free  press  lives — Menace  acquitted;  the 
Roman  Catholic  hierarchy  and  its  allies 
in  the  government  service  ingloriously 
defeated  in  greatest  legal  battle  of  the 
ages  .  .  .  truth  is  mighty  and  shall  pre- 
vail. Menace  Jan  22,   1916 

TS 

Discussion  of  trial  of  publishers  of  Menace 
for   alleged   "obscene"   criticism   of    Romanism. 

Growth  of  liberal  theology  in  England. 
(In:  Cambridge  historv  of  English  lit- 
erature 12:309-32  New  York  and  Lon- 
don, G.  P.  Putnam's  Sons  1916) 

RGS   '07-15 

Hodges,  George,  1856- 

Libcrty    of    difference.    Atlantic    Monthly 
117:784-93  June,  1916 
RG  '16 

MacDonald,   William,    1863- 

(cd.)  Documentary  source  book  of  Amer- 
ican history,  1606-1913.  New  York  and 
London,  The  Macmillan  co.  1916  xii, 
656p 

LC 

"Maryland   toleration    act";    53-5. 

Sanderson,  Edgar 

Jean  Calas,  one  of  the  Protestant  martyrs 
of  France.  Watson's  ^Magazine  22:194- 
208;   22:250-6   1916 

SchafF,  David  Schley,  1852- 
Jerome  of  Prague  and  the  five  hundredth 

anniversary    of    his    death.    Bibliotheca 

Sacra  73:192-213  April,  1916 
RGS  '16 

Sheppard,  J.  I. 

Speech  of  J.  L  Sheppard  delivered  to  the 
jury  at  Joplin,  Mo..  January  14,  1916, 
in  defense  of  The  Menace  and  its  staff, 
who  were  charged  with  sending  ob- 
scene matter  through  the  L^nited  States 
mails.    Menace   no.   251    Feb    12,    1916 

The  accused  publications  were  attacks  upon 
the  Catholic  priests  and  nuns.  Defendants  ac- 
quitted. 

Slander,  refusal  of  communion  to  church 
member.  [Carter  vs.  Papineau  (Mass.) 
Northwestern  Reporter  111:3581  Uni- 
versity of  Pennsylvania  Law  Review 
64:756   May.   1916 

ILP  '16 

Steiner,    Franklin 

Purity  law  vs.  free  press:  purposes  for 
which  the  Catholic  church  would  avail 
itself  of  this  statute.  Truth  Seeker  43: 
198  March  25.  1916 

Purity  laws  vs.  free  press;  proceedings  of 
the  Catholic  church  under  the  ."Statute 
in  the  case  of  [Thomasl  Watson.  Truth 
Seeker  43:214  April  1.  1916 

Republished  in  W.itson's  Afag.Trine  23:18.1-7, 
July.  1016.  Tom  Watson  (now  U.S.  Senator) 
was  arrested  for  "obscenity"  in  publishing  trans- 
lation of  Roman  Catholic  literature.  Later  ac- 
quitted. 

University    of    Colorado    vindicated.    Inde- 
pendent  86:321    May  29.    1916 
RG  '16 


Watson,  Thomas  E. 

Ofificial  record  of  case  of  United  States  v. 
Thomas  E.  Watson.  Watson's  Magazine 
22:111-68  1916 

Watson  was  indicted  for  sending  "obscenity" 
by  mail,  which  consisted  of  quotations  from 
Catholic   theologians.     The   jury   disagreed. 

Some  unappreciated  qualities  and  achieve- 
ments of  John  Milton.  Watson's  Maga- 
zine 22:171-5  1916 

Whitley,  William  Thomas 

Baptist  bibliography;  being  a  register  of 
the  chief  materials  for  Baptist  history, 
whether  in  manuscript  or  in  print,  pre- 
served in  Great  Britain  and  Ireland 
(comp.  for  the  Baptist  union  of  Great 
Britain  and  Ireland)  London,  the 
Kingsgate  press   1916  236p 

VI  contains  years  1526-1776.  300  titles  on 
"Freedom  to  print"  and  "Freedom  to  speak, 
teach  and  worship"  are  noticed  in  "Index  to 
subjects"  P238. 

Boutroux,  fitienne  fimile  Marie,  1845- 

Libcrty  of  conscience.  International 
Journal  of  Ethics  28:59-69  Oct,  1917; 
Same.  London  Quarterly  Review  128: 
190-200   Oct.    1917 

Gordon,   Alexander 

(cd.)  Freedom  after  ejection;  a  review 
(1690-1692)  of  Presbyterian  and  Con- 
gregational nonconformity  in  England 
and  Wales.  (Manchester  university  pub- 
lications. Historical  ser.,  no.  30)  New 
York,  Longmans,  Green  &  co.  1917  vii, 
396p 

uses 

Grant,  Percy  Stickney 

Church  forums  and  the  war.  Churchman 
116:531-2    Oct   27.    1917 

Hardwick,  Thomas  W. 

Senator  Hardwich  on  freedom  of  the 
press.  Menace  no.  331  Sept  1,  1917 

Judges,  editors  and  organizations  hold  that 
fundamental  democracy  must  be  pre- 
served .  .  .  comprehensive  review  of 
celebrated  cases  .  .  .  Menace  no.  328 
Aug  11,  1917 

Lockhart,  Andrew  Francis 

Interesting  account  of  [Free  press  de- 
fcnsel  League's  activities.  .  .  .  Perse- 
cuted editor  [A.  F.  Lockhartl  of  "Chain 
Lightning''  sentenced  to  I-"cderaI  prison 
[for  alleged  obscenity  in  anti-romanist 
disclosures.]  Menace  no.  320  June  9, 
1917  pi 

Religious  liberty.  Columbia  university 
studies  in  historv.  economics  and  public 
law  71:9-11   1917 

PAIS   '18 

Riley,  Elihu  Samuel,   1845- 

Maryland — the  pioneer  of  religious  lib- 
erty, the  only  Catholic  colony  of  the 
thirteen  and  the  first  to  establish  civil 
and  religious  freedom.  (Riley's  historic 
ser.  no.  2)  Annapolis.  Md.,  Elihu  S. 
Rilev.  box  34  1917  61p 

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Riotous  mob  of  "Catholic  citizens"  opposes 
freedom  of  religious  discussion;  Roman 
practices  and  teachings  triumph  over 
rights  guaranteed  by  the  federal  con- 
stitution .  .  .  Menace  no.  330  Aug  25, 
1917  9  columns 

TS 

Deals  with  mob  suppression  of  Protestants 
with   approval   of  the   police   and   judicial   action. 

Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,   1864- 

Judicial  idol  upset;  a  denial  of  the  au- 
thority of  Judge  Blackstone  to  inter- 
pret our  constitutions.  Truth  Seeker  44, 
22-3  Jan   13,   1917 

TS 

Steiner,  Franklin 

Genesis  of  Joseph.  Truth  Seeker  44:695 
Nov  3,  1917 

Deals  with  the  prosecution  of  editor  of  the 
Twin  City  Reporter,  Twin  City,  Minneapolis,  for 
republishing  thru  the  mails  a  poem  by  "Williams" 
entitled  "The  ballad  of  Joseph."  For  the  difficul- 
ties of  this  poem  see:  Schroeder,  T.  Ballad  of 
Joseph. 

Van  der  Weyde,  William  M. 

Brave  Richard  Carlile;  the  year  1917 
marks  the  centenary  of  his  battle  for 
freedom  of  the  press.  Truth  Seeker  44: 
561-3  Sept  8.  1917 

Will  democracy  humbly  submit  to  the  prus- 
sianization  of  the  national  press.  Men- 
ace  no.   333:4  Sept   15,    1917 

[Bannon,  Fred] 

Romish  plot  to  scourge  heretics  goes 
"over  the  top"  in  Detroit,  Mich.  One 
salesman  for  the  INIenace  arrested  four 
times  in  one  day  before  mayor  could 
sign  anti-heretic  ordinance  and  make  it 
effective.   Menace  July  6,   1918  pi 

Cohen,   Chapman 

Views  and  comment.  Freethinker  (Lon- 
don)  38:193-4  March  31,   1918 

Jesuit  historv  and  a  free  press.  Menace  no 
387   p2   Sept   28,    1918 

McKim,    Randolph 

Religious  Liberty  and  the  Maryland  tol- 
eration act;  a  replv  to  Cardinal  Gib- 
bons.  [Washington.  D.C.  1918]   28p 

Contends  on  historical  grounds  that  Maryland 
Edict  of  Toleration,  1649,  was  due  to  Protestants 
not  Catholics. 

On  freedom  of  reading.  Truth  Seeker  45: 
164  March  16,  1918 

An  editorial  on  suppressing  the  Truth  Seeker 
in  the  U.S.  army,  quotes  part  of  the  correspon- 
dence between  Theodore  Schroeder  and  Secretary 
of  War   Baker. 

A  Protestant  might  be  hung  for  such.  Alen- 
ace    no.   398:1-2   Dec    14,    1918 

Roman  index  dean  of  censors.  New  York 
Evening  Sun  31:9  Feb  7,  1918 

Rome  kidnapping  an  ariny  .  .  .  hierarchy 
attempts  to  dominate  Polish  army 
movement  and  by  shrewd  play  has  suc- 
ceeded so  well  that  post  office  depart- 
ment not  comprelicnding  the  full  import 
of  the  non-Catholic  Polish  protest,  has 
ruled  against  the  paper  which  criti- 
cizes the  hierarchy's  scheme.  Menace 
no.  .^89•l   Oct   12,   1918 


Tom  Watson.  Railsplitter  3:2  and  4  Dec, 
1918 

Reprinted  from  Primitive  Baptist,  Martin, 
Tcnn. 

Gives  an  account  of  Watson's  cases  and  ex- 
tracts of  his  speech.  He  was  prosecuted  and 
acquitted   of   "obscenity"   in   exposing   Romanism. 

Universal  religious  liberty.  Missionary  Re- 
view of  the   World  41:645-8  Sept,   1918 

RG    18 

Utah  and  the  case  of  Bishop  Jones.  Survey 
40:100  April  27,  1918 

RG  '18 

Eastman,  N,  L.  A. 

Open  door  to  hell;  brief  account  of  the 
trial  of  Bishop  Eastman;  every  article 
for  which  he  was  indicted  is  herein 
printed.  .  .  .  Milan,  111.  Truth  and 
Light  publishing  house  n.d.    [1919?] 

Between  1905-8  was  indicted  5  times  and  on  9 
counts,  in  both  state  and  U.S.  courts,  for  libel 
and  obscenity.  See:  People  v.  Eastman,  New 
York  Reporter  188:478.  The  original  articles 
were  all  directed  against  Romanism,  and  appeared 
in  the  Gospel  Worker,  for  May  1904;  Feb.  1906; 
May,  Aug.,  Sept.,  Oct.  and  Nov.  1907.  Finally 
acquitted   on   all. 

Flower,  Benjamin   Orange,   1858-1918 

(comp.)  Story  of  the  Menace  trial;  a 
brief  sketch  of  this  historic  case  with 
reports  of  the  masterly  addresses  by 
J.  L.  McNatt  and  J.  I.  Sheppard.  Aurora, 
Mo.,  United  States  publishing  co.  1919 
61p 

TS 

Trial  resulted  in  acquittal  on  charge  of  send- 
ing "obscenity"  through  the  mails,  which  con- 
sisted of  criticism  of  Roman  Catholic  institu- 
tions. 

Free  speech  case.  Truth  Seeker  46:596  Sept 

20,  1919 
TS 

Criticises  Oklahoma  school  board  for_  dismissing 
Mr  P.  A.  Oliver,  a  teacher,  for  not  giving  enough 
instruction   in   religion   and  patriotism. 

Notes  at  large.  Truth  Seeker  46:152  March 
8.  1919 

Tells  of  rejecting  a  witness  who  cannot  consci- 
enciously  take  an  oath  upon  the  Bible. 

Pagan,  A.  [pseud.] 

Judicial  authority.  Crucible  3:1  Feb  22, 
1919 

Deals  with  the  mobbing  of  anti-Catholic  lec- 
turers from  anti-papal  stand  point. 

Papal  raids  on  St  Louis  book  stores;  prose- 
cuting attorneys  said  by  Rome  to  be 
leading  the  motley  aggregation  of 
"heresy"  hunters.  Menace  no.  403:1  Jan 
8.  1919 

Protestantism  and  toleration.  Truth  Seeker 
46:658  Oct  18,  1919 

TS 

Discussion  based  upon  resignation  of  Bishop 
Kinsman  because  of  the  excessive  toleration  of 
his  church. 

Taylor,   Graham 

Bolshevism    of    Professor    Ward.    Survey 
41:920-1   March  29,   1919 
Verinder,  Frederick 

Lfondon]  C[ounty]  C[ouncil]  censorship. 
Freethinker  39:541-2   Nov  2.    1919 
TS 

Reports  controversy  on  prohibition  of  sale  of 
literature  of  freethought,  socialism  and  Russian 
revolution,  in  public  parks. 


FREE  SPEECH 


153 


1920— 


Bloody    record    of    Knights    of    Columbus. 

Railsplittcr  5:1  July,   1920 
TS 

Gives  account  of  many  cases  of  mob  violence 
used  against  opponents  of  Romanism. 

Friends'  plea  for  free  speech.  Literary   Di- 
gest 65:42  April  3,   1920 

King,  L.  J. 
Murderous   mob   of   rornan    Catholics   at- 
tack Methodist  service.     Railsplitter  5: 
l4l    Sept,   1920 

Notes   at   large.   Truth    Seeker  47:601    Sept 

18.   1920 
TS 

Gives  an  account  of  discrimination  in  police 
permits  for  street  speaking.  Free  thinkers,  social- 
ists and  bolshivists  are  prohibited. 

Religious  liberty   association 

Freedom,  civil  and  religious;  the  Ameri- 
can conception  of  liberty  for  press,  pul- 
pit and  public,  as  guaranteed  in  the  fed- 
eral constitution.  Washington,  D.C.  and 
New  York,  Review  and  herald  pub. 
assoc.  1920  128p 

LC 

Romanism   and    persecution.    Truth    Seeker 
47:516-17  Aug  14,  1920 

Shakespeare  and  the  Jew.  Freethinker  (Lon- 
don)  40:17  Jan   11,   1920 
TS 

Long  discussion  of  prohibition  of  Merchant  of 
Venice  by  school  board  of  Newark,  N.J. 

Way    to    unconstitute    authority.    New    Re- 
public 21:306-8  Feb  11,  1920 

Discusses  charges  and  vindication  of  Rev  Percy 
Grant  for  likening  deported  radicals  to  Pilgrim 
fathers. 

Roberts,  R. 

Intolerance  of  Jesus.  Literary  Guide  299: 
67-8  May,  1921 

Reliance  is  upon  such  passages  as  Mark  VI, 
II;   John   X. 


Blasphemy 

Alfred,  Guy  A. 

Richard  Carlile;  his  battle  for  the  free 
press;  how  defiance  defeated  govern- 
ment terrorism.  London,  Guy  A.  Aldred 
1912  40p 

TS 

Carlile   and   about   a  hundred   friends   went   to 
jail  for  blasphemy. 

Andrews,  William  Eusebius,  1773-1837 
Examination  of  Fox's  calendar  of  Prot- 
estant saints,  martyrs  .  .  .  contrasted 
with  a  biographical  sketch  of  Catholic 
missionary  priests  and  others  executed 
under  Protestant  penal  laws,  from  1335- 
1684;  abridged  from  Parson's  Examen 
and  Challoncr  memoirs,  with  additional 
remarks.  London  1826 


AsgUl,  John,  1659-1738 

Mr  Asgill's  defense  upon  his  expulsion 
from  the  House  of  commons  of  Great 
Britain  in  1707  .  .  .  Manchester,  A.  Hey- 
wood  &  son  1881  80p 

NY 

An  argument  proving  that  according  to  the 
covenant  of  eternal  life  as  revealed  in  the  Scrip- 
ture, man  may  be  translated  hence  into  that 
eternal  life  without  passing  thru  death,  altho  the 
human  nature  of  Christ  himself  could  not  be  so 
translated  till  he  passed  thru  death.  For  con- 
denced  account  of  his  troubles  see:  Schroeder,  T. 
Con^titutional    free   speech,    p3 18-22. 

Aspland,  Lindsey  Middleton 

Law  of  blasphemy:  being  a  candid  exam- 
ination of  the  views  of  Mr  Justice 
Stephen  .  .  .  with  an  appendix  contain- 
ing an  essay  on  religious  offenses  in- 
dicted at  common  law,  by  the  late  Ed- 
gar Taylor  and  the  speech  of  Lord 
Mansfield  in  the  House  of  lords  in  1767, 
in  the  case  of  the  sheriflfs  of  London — 
fChamberlain  of  London  v.  Evans.] 
London  1884  48p 

Aspland,   Robert 

Inquiry  into  the  nature  of  the  sin  of 
blasphemy  and  into  the  propriety  of 
regarding  it  as  a  civil  offence,  n.p. 
1817 

Bayley,  Sir  John 

Speech  in  passing  sentence  on  Richard 
Carlile,  in  the  Court  of  King's  bench, 
Nov  16,  1819,  for  publishing  The  age 
of  reason  and  for  reprinting  Palmer's 
Principles   of   nature.    London    [1819] 

[Bible-blasphemy;  review  of  A  special  re- 
port of  the  trial  of  the  Rev  Vladimir 
Petcherine.  in  the  court  house,  Dublin, 
1856.]  Edinburgh  Review  40:200-52 
1856 

Blasphemy  and  blasphemous  libel.  Canada 
Law  Journal    19:183-88  1883 

Blasphemy  laws;  what  they  are  and  why 
they  should  be  abolished.  London,  Com- 
mittee for  the  repeal  of  the  blasphemy 
laws   1912   4p 

Blasphemy  sentence.  Spectator  56:313-14 
1883 

Y 

Editorial  on  the  imprisonment  of  G.  W.  Foote 
for  blasphemy,  in  England. 

Bonner,  Hypatia  Bradlaugh,  1858- 

(ed.)  Penalties  upon  opinion:  or  some 
records  of  the  laws  of  heresy  and  blas- 
phemy. London.  Wells  &  co.   1912  lllp 

TS 

Boy  in  the  next  seat.  Truth  Seeker  47:308-9 
May  15,  1920 

TS 

Discusses  exclusion  of  the  Truth  Seeker  from 
U.S.  mails  when  directed  to  Canadian  subscribers. 

Boyle,  Humphrey 

Report  of  the  trial  of  Humphrey  Boyle, 
indicted  at  the  instance  of  the  Consti- 
tutional association,  as  "a  man  with 
name  unknown,"  for  publishing  an  al- 
leged blasphemous  and  seditious  libel, 
as  one  of  the  shopmen  of  Mr  Carlile; 
which    took  place   before   Mr   Common 


154 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Sergeant  Dcnman,  and  a  common  jury, 
at  the  Old  Bailey  sessions  house,  on  the 
27th  of  May,  1822;  with  a  narrative  of 
the  proceedings  against  the  defendant 
before  trial;  to  which  is  attached,  the 
trial  of  Joseph  Rhodes,  under  the  name 
of  Wm.  Holmes,  as  forced  upon  him, 
for  publishing  a  copy  of  the  same  pam- 
phlet. London,  Printed  by  R.  Carlile 
and  published  at  the  Koran  society's 
office  1822  32p 
LC  NY 

This    was    part    of    the    movement    headed    by 
Richard  Carlile.     See  Carlisle. 

Brown,    H.    H. 

Old  Scots  law  of  blasphem}'.  Juridical  Re- 
view 30:1   March,   1918 

Campbell,  Theophila  (Carlile) 

Battle  of  the  press,  as  told  in   the  story 
of   the   life   of   Richard   Carlile;    by   his 
daughter.  London,  A.   &  H.   B.  Bonner 
1899   vii,319p 
LC  TS 

Campion,  W. 

Report  of  the  trials  of  W.  Campion  and 
others  for  the  sale  of  anti-Christian 
publications  in  the  shop  of  R.  Carlile. 
London  1824 

[Carlile,  Jane?] 

Report  of  the  trial  of  Mrs  Carlile,  on 
the  attorney-general's  ex-officio  infor- 
mation for  the  protection  of  tyrants; 
with  the  information  and  defence  at 
large  before  Mr  Justice  Abbott  and  a 
special  jury  at  the  Guildhall,  London. 
London,  J.  Carlile  1821  24p 
NY  Y 

Carlile,   Mary 

Blasphemy;  [being  a  denial  of  the  charge 
of  blasphemy  brought  against  Richard 
Carlile  and  others.]    [1821?! 

Carlile,  Mary-Anne 

Bridge-Street  banditti  versus  the  press; 
report  of  the  trial  of  Mary-Anne  Car- 
lile for  publishing  a  New  Year's  ad- 
dress to  the  reformers  of  Great  Britain 
.  .  .;  with  the  noble  and  efifectual  speech 
of  Mr  Cooper  in  defence  at  large.  Lon- 
don. R.   Carlile   1821   53p 

NY 

Suppressed  defence:  the  defence  of  Mary- 
Anne  Carlile  to  the  Vice  society's  in- 
dictment against  the  appendix  to  the 
theological  works  of  Thomas  Paine; 
which  defence  was  suppressed  by  Mr 
Justice  Best  almost  at  its  commence- 
ment .  .  .  London,  R.  Carlile  1821  46p 
NY 

[Carlile,  Richard]    1790-1843 

Dialogue  on  the  approaching  trial  of  Mr 
Carlile  for  publishing  the  Age  of  rea- 
son; with  the  trial  anticipated  .  .  .  Lon- 
don. T.  J.  Wooler  1819  16p 

NY 

Rcnrinted  from  Wooler's  British  Gazette,  April 
i8,    tSig. 


Jail  jottings  (1820-1825);  with  an  intro- 
ductory account  of  Carlile's  mock  trial 
for  blasphemy  and  his  speech  from  the 
dock;  edited  and  compiled  by  Guy  A. 
Aldred.  London,  Bakunin  press  1913  48p 
TS 

Carlile  and  120  friends  went  to  jail  for 
blasphemy  in  selling  Paine's  Age  of  reason,  etc. 

Report  of  the  proceedings  of  the  Court 
of  King's  bench  in  the  Guildhall,  Lon- 
don, on  the  12th,  13th,  14th  and  15th 
days  of  October;  being  the  mock  trials 
of  Richard  Carlile  for  alleged  blas- 
phemous libels,  in  publishing  Thomas 
Paine's  Theological  works  and  Elihu 
Palmer's  Principles  of  nature  .  .  .  Lon- 
don, R.  Carlile  1822  xx,203p 
NY 

Case    of    Michael    Mockus    for    blasphemy. 
Outlook  115:111  Jan  17,  1917 

See  also  numerous  items  in:  Sankey-Jones,  N. 
E.  Theodore  Schroeder  on  free  speech.  Also: 
Mockus. 

Censorship    again.     Truth    Seeker    Feb    12, 

1916 
TS 

Comments   on  suppression   of  The   Masses   for 

publishing  The  ballad  of  Joseph;   also  republishes 

the    poem.       See    Schroeder's    account    for    other 

suppressions,    alleging   "obscenity." 

Christophilus,  pseud. 

Vindiciae  Britannicae:  Christianity  inter- 
ested in  the  dismissal  of  ministers;  a 
vindication  of  the  people  from  the 
charge  of  blasphemy,  and  a  defence  of 
the  freedom  of  the  press.  2d  ed  altered 
and  corrected  (Pamphlets,  vl9)  London 
1822  161-99,  369-429p 
B 

General   discussion   of  blasphemy  and   sedition. 

— Same.  London.  Printed  for  W.  Simpkin  & 

R.   Marshal   1821   v-xll,180p 
TS 

Cohen,    Chapman 

"Blasphemy"  in   Nigeria.   Freethinker  Z7: 
689-90 

Fight  for  right;  the  decision  of  the  House 
of  lords  in  re  Bowman  and  others  v. 
the  Secular  society,  limited;  verbatim 
report,  with  introduction  by  Chapman 
Cohen.  (Issued  by  the  Secular  society, 
limited)  [Law  Reports,  Appeal  cases, 
part  4.  406-4781  1917  London,  Pioneer 
press  [1918]  84p 
TS 

Contains  an  elaborate  discussion  of  the 
blasphemy  laws  and  reverses  some  former  de- 
cisions. For  critical  review  see:  Lee.  R.  W. 
"The  law  of  blasphemy,"   Michigan   Law  Review 

i6:i4Q-57. 

Coleridge,  Sir  John  Duke  Coleridge,  baron 
Coleridge,  1820-1894 
Law  of  blasphemous  libel:  the  summing 
up  in  the  case  of  Rcgina  v.  Foote  and 
others;  Revised  and  with  a  preface  by 
the  Lord  chief  justice  of  England.  Lon- 
don, Stevens  &  sons  1883  32p 

George  \V.  Foote  was  sentenced  to  one  year  in 
prison.   See:   Cababe  and  Ellis  Reports   1:126. 


FREE  SPEECH 


155 


Conspiracy    against    the    Menace.    Menace 

March   22,   1913 
TS 

Long  discussion  of  a  proposed  law  to  penalize 
in  Colorado  such  matter  as  might  have  been 
called  blasphemy  in   the    i6th   and    17th  century. 

Constant,  F. 

A  propos  de  blaspheme.  Etudes  Francis- 
caines   20:128-41    1908 

Conway,  Moncure  D[aniel,]    1832- 

Blasphemous  libels  .  .  .   (Lessons  for  the 

day.  no.  24)  London,  E.  W.  Allen  [1883] 

p277-88 
NY 

Coulson,  H.  J.  W. 

Laws   relating   to   blasphemy.   Law   Mag- 
azine and  Law  Review  9:158-73  1883-84 
Y 

Davidson,  Thomas 

Trial  of  Thomas  Davidson  for  publishing 
a  blasphemous  libel  in  the  Deists' 
Magazine;  in  the  Court  of  King's 
Bench.  Guildhall.  London,  on  Monday, 
October  23d.  1820;  with  a  prefatory  let- 
ter to  Mr  Justice  Best.  London,  R. 
Helder  1820  vii,9-58p 
NY 

Definition  of  blasphemy.  Central  Law  Jour- 
nal 17:38-40  July  6,  1883  (Quoting  from 
Law  Journal") 

Y 

De  Laune,  Thomas 

Plea  for  the  non-conformists  showing  the 
true  state  of  their  case:  and  how  far 
the  conformists  separation  from  the 
church  of  Rome,  for  their  popish  super- 
stitions &  introduced  into  the  service 
of  God,  justifies  the  non-conformists 
separation  from  them.  Ballston  [N.Y.] 
1800  21 Ip 
TS 

Dreiser,  Theodore 

The  genius.  New  York  and  London.  John 
Lane   co.    1915   736p 
TS 

Suppressed  for  blasphemy  and  obscenity. 

Dunlap,  Andrew,  [1794-1835] 

Speech  delivered  before  the  Municipal 
court  of  Boston  in  defence  of  Abner 
Knecland.  on  an  indictment  for  bla<;- 
phemy,  Januarv  term,  1834  Boston. 
Printed  for  the  publisher   1834   132p 

HCL  TS 

An  unusually  erudite  discussion.  For  deci- 
sion on  appeal  sec:  Massachusetts  Reports  37:206 
(Pickering  20").  For  critical  review  and  bibli- 
ography of  Kneeland  trial  see:  Schroeder,  T. 
Constitutional  free  speech,  p  72-88. 

Eaton.  Daniel  Isaac 

Trial  of  Daniel  Isaac  Eaton  for  publish- 
ing the  last  part  of  Paine's  Age  of 
R-^ason.    1812 

Defendant  convicted. 

Foote.  George  William,  1850- 

Dofcnce  of  free  speech:  being  a  throe 
hours    address    to    the   jurv   .  .  .    before 


Lord  Coleridge,  on  April  24,   1883  .  .  . 
London,      Progressive     publishing     co. 
1889  45p 
TS 

See  R  V.  Ramsey  &  Foote,  Cababe  and  Ellis 
Report    (nisi   prius)    1:126.      Foote  convicted. 

Fox,  William  Johnson 

Duties  of  Christians  toward  deists;  a  ser- 
mon preached  Oct  24,  1819  on  occasion 
of  the  recent  prosecution  of  Mr  Carlile 
for  the  republication  of  Paine's  Age 
of  reason.  2d  ed  London  1819 
HCL 

Fuld 

Die    gotteslJisterung    und    das    strafrecht. 
Archiv   fiir   strafrecht   und   strafprozess 
39:142-7  1892 
PAR 

Gott.  J.  W. 

Gott     in     jail     for     libeling    Christianity. 
Crucible    [Seattle,   Wash.]    No.   38   Dec 
22.  1917 
TS 

Tells  of  his  own  conviction  and  that  of  J.  J. 
Riley  for  blasphemy.  This  was  Gott's  second 
arrest  for  an  expurgated  edition  of  his  "Rib  tick- 
lers." The  first  arrest  was  in  Leeds,  England; 
the  second  in  Birmingham. 

See  also  Pack,  Ernest. 

Special.      Freethinker      (London")      41:169 
March  13,  1921 
TS 

Gives  account  of  another  conviction  of  this 
man,  both  for  blasphemy  and  "obscenity."  The 
latter  consisted  in  imparting  information  for 
birth  control.  Republished  in  Truth  Seeker  48: 
216  April  2,   1921. 

Great  Britain.  Statutes 

Anno  primo  Gulielmi  I'V.  Regis;  cap 
LXXIII.  An  act  to  repeal  so  much  of 
an  act  of  the  sixtieth  year  of  His  late 
Majesty  King  George  the  Third,  for 
the  more  effectual  prevention  and  pun- 
ishment of  blasphemous  and  seditious 
libels,  as  relates  to  the  sentence  of  ban- 
ishment for  the  second  offence;  and 
to  provide  some  further  remed}''  against 
the  abtise  of  publishing  libels.  23  July, 
1830.  [London,  George  Eyre  &  Andrew 
Strahan   1830]   689-9rp 

NY 

Anno  scxagesimo  Georgii  TIL  Regis;  cap 
\''TII.  An  act  for  the  more  effectual 
prevention  and  punishment  of  blasphe- 
mous and  seditious  libels.  30  Decem- 
ber, 1819  [London.  George  Evre  &  An- 
drew Strahan  1819]  61-4p 
NY 

Anno  sexagesimo  Georgii  TIT.  Regis;  can 
TX.  An  act  to  subject  certain  publica- 
tions to  the  duties  of  stamps  upon  news- 
papers, and  to  make  other  regulations 
for  restraining  the  abuses  arising  from 
the  publication  of  blasphetnous  and 
seditious  libels.  30  December.  1819 
[London.  Georee  Evre  &  Andrew 
Spottiswoode  1833]  65-74p 
NY 


156 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


[Herzog,  Alfred  W.] 

Free  speech.  Medico-Legal  Journal  34:9 
May,  1917 

Hetherington,    Henry,    1792-1849 

Full  report  of  the  trial  of  H.  Hethering- 
ton, on  an  indictment  for  blasphemy 
.  .  .  for  selling  Haslam's  letters  to  the 
clergy  of  all  denominations;  with  the 
whole  of  the  authorities  cited  in  the 
defence  at  full  length.  London,  H. 
Hetherington    1840   32p 

NY 

Holyoake,   George  Jacob,    1817-1906 

Last  trial  by  jury  for  atheism,  a  frag- 
ment of  autobiography,   n.p.   1851 

Trial   of   G.  J.    H.   on   an   indictment   for 
blasphemy    .  .  .    London,    Anti-persecu- 
tion  union    1842  68p 
NY 

Part  of  the  contents:  Roll  call  of  imprisoned 
friends;  Agitators  who  gave  trouble  to  juries  and 
courts;  Further  calendar  of  friends  whose  fate 
needs  explanation  (1840-90);  Trouble  in  the 
way;  Arrest  in  Cheltham;  Three  weeks  in  prison 
for  not  taking  oath;  Six  months  in  jail  for  an- 
swering a  question  in  debate;  Richard  Carlile 
the  publisher;  "Holy  war"  of  the  unstamped 
press;   Ernest  Jones;  etc. 

Hone,    William,    1780-1842 

First  trial  of  W.  Hone  .  .  .  for  publishing 
a  parody  on  the  late  John  Wilkes's 
Catechism  of  a  ministerial  member.  8tli 
ed  London,  W.  Hone  1817  48p 

NY 

First  trial  of  William  Hone  .  .  .  London, 
Dec  17,  1817  ...  for  publishing  the 
late  John  Wilkes's  Catechism  of  a  min- 
isterial member.  2d  ed  London,  W. 
Hone  1817  48p 
NY 

Proceedings  at  the  public  meeting  Dec. 
29,  1817,  at  the  City  of  London  tavern 
for  the  purpose  of  enabling  William 
Hone  to  surmount  the  difficulties  in 
which  he  has  been  placed  by  being 
selected  by  the  ministers  of  the  crown 
as  the  object  of  their  persecutions  .  .  , 
London  1818 
HCL 

Reprinted  in  his  Three  trials  of  William  Hone 
(i88o?)   P192-243. 

Second  trial  of  W.  Hone  .  .  .  Dec.  19, 
1817  .  .  .  for  publishing  a  parody,  with 
an  alleged  intent  to  ridicule  the  litany, 
and  libel  the  Prince  Regent,  the  House 
of  lords,  and  the  House  of  commons. 
London,  W.  Hone  1817  45p 
NY 

—Same.  2d  ed  London.  W.  Hone   1818  45p 

NY 

—Same.  3d  ed  London,  W.  Hone   1818  4Sp 
NY 

Third    trial    of    William    Hone,    ...    for 
publishing  a  parody  on  the  Athanasian 
creed,   entitled   "The   sinecure's   creed." 
14th  ed  London,  W.  Hone  1818  44p 
NY 


Three  trials  of  William  Hone,  for  publish- 
ing three  paradies;  .  .  .,  at  Guildhall, 
London,  before  three  special  juries  and 
Mr  Justice  Abbott  on  the  first  day, 
December  18th,  1817,  and  Lord  Chief 
Justice  Ellenborough,  on  the  two  last 
days,  December  19th  and  20th;  with 
introduction  and  notes  by  William 
Tegg.  London,  W.  Tegg  &  co.  1876 
232p 
TS 

For  publishing:  Wilke's  Catechism;  a  parody 
entitled:  The  political  litany;  a  parody  on  Athan- 
asian creed  entitled  The  sinecurists  creed.  Ac- 
quitted by  each  jury. 

Houston,  George 

Ecce    homo!    or,    A    critical    inquiry    into 
the  history  of  Jesus  of  Nazareth;  being 
a  rational  analysis  of  the  gospels.  New 
York  1827 
— Same.  2d  ed  London,  G.  Houston  1813 

The  first  English  edition  was  published  anon- 
omously  in  1799;  the  second  in  1813.  The  latter 
resulted  in  two  years  imprisonment  and  a  fine 
of  200 £.  See  Schroeder's  "Constitutional  free 
speech  defined  and  defended,"  P347,  for  an  ac- 
count of  its  suppression  as  blasphemous. 

Hunter,  William  Alexander 

Blasphemy  laws:  should  they  be  abol- 
ished? Plymouth,  Association  for  the 
repeal  of  blasphemy  laws  1884  23p 

NY 

Ingersoll,  Robert  G. 
Trial  of  C.  B.  Reynolds  for  blasphemy  at 
Morristown,    N.J.,    May   19th  and   20th, 
1887;    defence   by   Robert   G.   Ingersoll. 
New  York,  C.  P.  Farrell  1888  84p 

TS 

Is  this  a  question  of  religion?  [Inquiry  as 
to  what  caused  the  Truth  Seeker  to  be 
suppressed.]  Truth  Seeker  45:750-2  Nov 
30,   1918 

The  Truth  Seeker  was  excluded  for  making 
an  argument  against  Christianity  by  claiming  that 
the  Kaiser's  mode  of  barbarous  warfare  was  an 
imitation  of  that  portrayed  in  Holy  Writ  . 

Jackson,  Thomas  A. 

"The  devil  is  dead."  Jerusalem  Star  (Brad- 
ford,  England)   no  21    [1919] 

Gives  brief  account  of  several  arrests  of  J.  W. 
Gott  for  blasphemy,  and  quotes  this:_  "The  Lon- 
don Police  comissioners  are  of  opinion  that  no 
useful  public  purpose  would  be  served  by  any 
further   prosecutions   for   blasphemy." 

Kneeland,  Abner,   1774-1844 

Introduction  to  the  defence  of  Abner 
Kneeland,  charged  with  blasphemy  be- 
fore the  Municipal  court  in  Boston, 
Mass.,  at  the  January  term  in  1834. 
Boston,  Printed  for  the  publisher  1834 
43p 

TS 

Report  of  the  arguments  of  the  attorney 
of  the  commonwealth,  at  the  trials  of 
Abner  Kneeland,  for  blasphemy,  in  the 
municipal  and  supreme  courts  in  Bos- 
ton, January  and  May,  1834.  [Boston, 
Printed  by  Beals,  Homer  &  co.  1834] 
93p 

B   TS  .O.J 

See  Massachusetts  Reports  37:200;  Schroeder, 
T.  "Constitutional  free  speech,"  chap.  7.  for  cnt- 
ical  review. 


FREE  SPEECH 


157 


Review  of  the  prosecution  against  Abner 
Kneeland  for  blasphemy;  by  a  cosmo- 
polite.  Boston    1835   32p 
HCL  TS 

See  Schroeder,  T.  "Constitutional  free  speech," 
chap.  7;  criticising  Massachusetts  Reports  37:206 
(20  Pickering). 

Review  of  the  trial,  conviction  and  final 
imprisonment  in  the  common  jail  of  the 
county  of  Suffolk,  of  A.  K.,  for  the 
alleged  crime  of  blasphemy;  written  by 
himself.  Boston,  George  A.  Chapman 
1838  132p 
NY 

Speech  delivered  before  .  .  .  the  Supreme 
court,  in  his  own  defence,  for  the  al- 
leged crime  of  blasphemy  .  .  .  March 
8,  1836.  Boston,  J.  Q.  Adams  1836  viii. 
r9]-44p 
B  LC  NY  TS 

Decision  in  this  case  is  officially  reported  in 
Massachusetts  Reports  37:206  (20  Pickering). 

Law  of  blasphemy.  Irish  Law  Times  and 
Solicitor's  Journal  17:225-6  April  28, 
1883 

Law  of  blasphemy.  London  Magazine  ns 
19:360-2    1827 

Law  relating  to  blasphemy.  Law  Magazine 
8:247-80  1860 

Lee.  R.  W. 

Law    of    blasphemy.    Michigan    Law    Re- 
view  16:149-57  Jan,   1918 
TS 

Critical  review  of  House  of  lords  decision  in 
the  case  of  Bowman  v.  Secular  society.  [1907] 
Appeals  cases,  406. 

[Legate,  Bartholomew] 

Anglicans  and  dissenters  under  James  I; 
a  text  without  note  or  comment  [re- 
lating to  Bartholomew  Legat,  who  was 
burned  for  heresy  at  Smithfield,  in 
1612.]  British  Review  5:208-12  1914 
NY 

See  for  this  case:  Howell's  State  trials  2:727; 
also:  Schroeder,  T.  Constitutional  free  speech, 
P181-83. 

Letter  to  Sir  Samuel  Shepherd,  Knt.,  His 
Majesty's  attorney-general,  upon  the 
subject  of  his  prosecutions  of  Richard 
Carlile  for  publishing  Paine's  Age  of 
reason.   London,    R.    Carlile    1819  28p 

NY   Y 

Lewis,  W[illiam]    D[raper] 

On  liberty  of  opinion,  in  relation  to  the 
law  of  blasphemous  libels.  (In:  Papers 
read  before  the  Juridical  society,  1858- 
1863.  2:250-82  London   1863) 

NYLI 

MacDonell,  John 

Blasphemy   and    the   common    law.    Fort- 
nightly Review  39:776-89  June,  1883 
Y 

Maude.  William  CasscU.  1850- 

Law  of  blasphemy.  [Review  of  Bowman 
V.  Secular  societv.  1917  Appeal  cases 
4061    Month  p320-8  April,   1918 


Meaning   of   blasphemy.    Truth    Seeker   43: 
132  March  2.   1918 

An  unsigned  editorial  commenting  on  a  letter 
by  Rev  Francis  E.  Clark,  founder  of  Christian 
Endeavor  society,  which  letter  had  been  pub- 
lished in  the  The  New  Republic,  complaining  of 
one   of  its  editorials  as  being  blasphemous. 

Mimnermus,    (pseud.) 
Richard  Carlile,  1790-1843.  Freethinker  4: 
612  Sept  30,   1917 
TS 

Mockus,  Michael 

At  Waterbury,  Conn.,  U.  S.  A.,  Rev 
Michael  Mockus,  Unitarian  minister  has 
been  prosecuted  for  blasphemy.  Free- 
thinker 4:37  Feb  28,   1917 

See:  Schroeder  T.  Constitutional  free  speech, 
etc. 

On  scence  of  blasphemy  trial  of  Michael 
Mockus.  Truth  Seeker  43:56  Dec  16, 
1916 

Moss,  Arthur  B. 

Bible    blasphemy.    Toronto    Investigator 
2:11-14   May.   1912 
TS 

Republished  from  Freethinker  (London).  In- 
spired by  London  meeting,  Jan.  15,  1912,  pro- 
testing against  the  revival  of  blasphemy  prose- 
cutions. 

Muggleton,  Lodowick,  1609-1697 

A  true  account  of  the  trial  and  suffering 
of  Lodowick  Muggleton  one  of  the 
two  last  prophets  and  witnesses  of  the 
spirit,  left  by  our  friend  Powell,  who 
witnessed  the  trial  and  all  his  suffer- 
ings, therefore  he  gives  a  more  full 
and  particular  account  of  the  whole 
proceedings  than  the  prophet  has  left 
on  record,  which  is  the  cause  of  my 
printing  it,  that  believers  may  see  how 
patiently  your  prophet  bore  those  suf- 
ferings on  truths  account.  .  .  .  Printed 
for   T.   Fever    1808  24p 

TS 

Gives  an  account  of  trial  for  blasphemy  on  his 
book:  The  Neck  of  the  Quakers  broken.  Trial 
in  1676.    Pages  18,  31,  54  were  held  blasphemous. 

New,  John  Fair 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  United 
States.  [John  Fair  New,  petitioner,  vs. 
United  States  of  America,  respondent.] 
Petition  and  brief  to  the  Supreme  court 
of  the  United  States,  n.p.,  n.d.  23p 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  United  States. 
[John  Fair  New,  petitioner,  vs.  United 
States  of  America,  respondent.]  Ex 
parte  petition  and  brief  in  forma 
pauperis,  n.p.,  n.d.  22p 

In  the  United  States  circuit  court  of  ap- 
peals: ninth  judicial  district.  [John 
Fair  New.  plaintiff  in  error,  vs.  United 
States  of  America,  defendants  in  error.] 
Opening  brief  of  plaintiff  in  error,  n.p.. 
n.d.  56p 

The  alleged  fraudulent  representations  about 
immortality  were  in  the  indictment  alleged  also 
to  be  blasphemous. 


158 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Supreme  court  of  the  United  States:  Oc- 
tober term,  1917.  [John  Fair  New,  peti- 
tioner, vs.  The  United  States  of  Amer- 
ica.] Washington,  Judd  &  Detweiler 
1918  171p 

Convicted  of  fraudulent  use  of  mails  on  claim 
of  having  attained  personal  physical  immortality 
and  other  "supernatural"  qualities.  The  indict- 
ment denounces  him  as  "Imposter  and  heretic, 
a  seeker  of  vain  glory."  His  books  used  in  evi- 
dence are:  Newology  or  the  New  Bible,  and  New 
Life  Theology.  For  only  similar  case  see,  Asgtll, 
John. 

Norton,  John,   1606-1663 

Heart  of  New  England  rent  at  the  blas- 
phemies    of     the     present     generation. 
Cambridge  1659 
Y 

Odgers,   W[Uliam]    Blake 

Law   relating   to    heresy   and    blasphemy. 
Modern  Review  4:586-608  1883 
Y 

Offence  of  blasphemy.  Irish  Law  Times 
and  Solicitor's  Journal  17:146  March  17, 
1883 

On  proceedings  for  blasphemous  libel. 
Monthly   Law    Magazine   9:144-56    1840 

Pack,  Ernest 

Trial  and  imprisonment  of  J.  W.  Gott 
for  blasphemy.  Bradford  [England] 
Freethought   socialist   league    n.d.    158p 

TS 

Prosecution  for  folder  Rib  ticklers,  or  ques- 
tions for  parsons,  19 ii.  Again  prosecuted  on 
same  charge  at  Birmingham.  See  Freethinker 
(London)  July  22,  1917.  Pack's  book  gives  much 
information   about  past  blasphemy  cases. 

Palmer,  Elihu,  1763-1806 

Principles  of  nature;  or,  A  development 
of  moral  causes  of  happiness  and  misery 
among  the  human  species.  London  1802 

NY 

Reprinted  in  1819  by  Richard  Carlile  and  R.  C. 
convicted  thereon. 

Parody   on   the   tent   scene   in    Richard   the 

Third.  London,  R.  Carlile  1818  8p 
NY 

—Same;  with  T.  J.  Wooler's  Appeal  to  the 

citizens  of  London.  London  1817  32p 
Y 

Proposed      statute     regarding     blasphemy. 

[England]     Law     Notes     17:78-9    July, 

1913 
ILP  '13 

Religious  bigotry  and  persecution  in  the 
United  States.  Secular  Thought  24:169- 
70  April  14,  1900 

TS 

Tells  of  excluding  free-thought  papers  from 
Canada. 

Repeal  of  the  blasphemy  laws.  Spectator 
59:476-7  1886 

Editorial  on  bill  of  Mr  Courtney  Kenny,  intro- 
duced in  Parliament  "to  abolish  prosecutions 
against  laymen  for  the  expression  of  opinion  in 
matters    of   religion." 

[Robins,  David] 

Free  speech  advocate;  noted  lawyer  of 
Cos  Cob    [Conn.]    who  defends  alleged 


"Blasphemer."      News      and      Graphic, 
Greenwich,   Conn.   Dec  7,   1917 

An  appreciation  of  Theodore  Schroeder  in 
connection  with  the  Mockus  case. 

Rome  resurrects  obsolete  blue  law  to  pun- 
ish apostate  Catholic.  Menace  no.  305 
Feb   24,    1917 

Cities  case  of  M.  X.  Mockus. 

Rosenthal,  Elias 
Theodore  Dreiser's  "Genius"  damned,  n.d. 

1917  8p 
TS 

Deals  with  the  suppression  of  the  above  book 
by  a  threat  of  prosecution  for  obscenity  and  for 
blasphemy. 

Ross,  Olin  J. 

Mockus  blasphemy  case.  Crucible  7:1 
June   26,    1921 

Strictures  on  decision  in  case  of  State  v. 
Mockus,     Atlantic     Reporter     113:39. 

Ross,  R.  S. 

Melbourne  blasphemy  case,  by  Alfred  W. 
Forster.    Truth    Seeker   46:635    Oct    4, 
1919 
TS 

Tells  of  conviction  of  R.  S.  Ross  for  an  ar- 
ticle entitled:  Bolshevism  has  broken  out  in 
heaven;  published  in  Ross's  Magazine. 

Row,  C.  A. 

Mr  Foote  and  the  blasphemy  laws.  Spec- 
tator 56:1121-2  1883 
Y 

Deals  with  conviction  of  George  W.  Foote. 
For  decision  see:  Cababe  &  Ellis  Reports   1:126. 

Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,   1864- 
Argument  on  blasphemy;  the  former  atti- 
tude of  the   English  courts  and  recent 
changed    constructions.    Truth     Seeker 
43:822-4  Dec  23,   1916 
TS 

Ballad    of    Joseph.    Truth    Seeker    45:163 
March   16,   1918 
TS 

Blasphemy  analyzed;    it   disappears   as    a 
state  offence  when  a  state  ceases_  to  be 
a     theocracy.     Truth     Seeker     45:177-8 
March  23,   1918 
TS 

Blasphemy  and  free  speech,  being  sample 
portions  of  an  argument  which  a  Con- 
necticut judge  refused  to  read.  Printed 
to  promote  the  repeal  of  the  blasphemy 
laws.    New    York,    Free    speech    league 

1918  53p 


TS 


Blasphemy  as  it  is  in  law;  how  an  en- 
lightened Christian  judge  might  charge 
the  jury  in  a  pending  prosecution.  Truth 
Seeker  45:550-1,  570-1  Aug  31.  Sept  7. 
1918;  Repeated  in  45:650-1,  666-7  Oct 
12.  19,   1918 


TS 


Reprinted  as:  Law  of  blasphemy,  by  Free 
speech  league,  1919-  i8p. 
Blasphemy  as  it  was;  you  were  guilty 
once  if  you  ridiculed  any  part  of  the 
Bible,  even  Jonah.  Truth  Seeker  45: 
194-5    March    30,    1918 


TS 


FREE  SPEECH 


159 


Brief  for  free  speech;  the  blasphemy  argu- 
ment brings  up  the  history  of  toleration 
in  New  York;  the  animus  of  Justice 
Kent  in  the  Ruggles  case — his  clerical 
antecedents;  over-ruling  of  Justice  Kent 
by  Judge  Parker  in  the  case  of  Charles 
C.  Moore.  Truth  Seeker  44:70-1,  86,  102- 
3  Feb  3.  10,  171   1917 

TS 

Freethinkers  and  radicals.  Truth  Seeker 
45:184   March  23,   1918 

TS 

Intellectual  liberty  and  literary  style. 
Open  Court  34:275-8  May,  1920;  Re- 
published in:  Crucible  3:1-2  July  18, 
1920 

Liberty    includes    right    to    use    scurrilous    lan- 
guage,   Prompted    by    Mockus    blasphemy    case. 

Libertarian's  ambition.  Truth   Seeker  45: 
291   May  11.   1918 
TS 

Meaning   of   free    thought.    Truth    Seeker 
45:152   March  9,   1918 
TS 

A    short    preachment     which     ends     with     an 
appeal    for    money    in    the   M.    X.    Mockus    blas- 
phemy case. 
Measure    of   our   sincerity.   Truth    Seeker 
45:232  April  13,  1918 
TS 

Mockus  case;  attorney  Schroeder's  state- 
ment.   Truth    Seeker    44:787    Dec    15, 
1917 
TS 

Mockus  case  again.   Truth   Seeker  45:167 
March  16.  1918 
TS 

Mockus  once  more.  Truth  Seeker  45:651 
Oct  12.  1918 
TS 

Reports  disappearance  of  Mockus  and  indefinite 
postponement  of  case. 

On  the  scene  of  the  blasphemy  trial.  Truth 
Seeker  43:808   Dec   17,   1916 
TS 

On   the   M.   X.   Mockus  case. 

Opinion  on  blasphemy.  Truth  Seeker  45: 
794    Dec    21.    1918 
TS 

Quotes  opinion  of  Judge  Persons  of  Waukegan, 
III.  (March  3.  1017)  holding  in  a  prosecution 
a?ainst  M.  X.  Mockus,  that  the  constitution  of 
111.  annulled  the  conimonlaw  crime  of  blasphemy. 

Rome  resurrects  obsolete  blue  laws  to 
punish  apostate  Catholic:  suppressors  of 
free  speech  attempt  to  convict  Mockus 
of  blasphemy  under  an  old  colonial 
statute  of  Connecticut;  public  hears 
Rome's  evidence  against,  but  all  except 
the  priests  ordered  from  the  court  room 
when  he  takes  the  stand  in  his  own 
behalf.  Menace  no.  305  Feb  24,  1917 
TS 

Scope    of    blasphemy    laws.    Blackstone's 
critics.  Truth  Seeker  44:38  Jan  20.  1917 
TS 

Scope   of   the    blasphemy   laws:    once   as- 
sociated with  treason  and  covered  what 


we    call    labor   agitation.    Truth    Seeker 

43:838-9    Dec   30.    1916 
TS 

Some  odd  blasphemy  cases.    Truth  Seeker 

44:547    Sept    1.    1917 
TS 

Toleration  is  a  crime  and  'tis  blasphemy 
to   advocate    it,   according   to    the   blue 
laws  and  puritan  idea.  Truth  Seeker  44: 
1-2  Jan  6,  1917 
TS 

Twin   of  witchcraft;    such   is   blasphemy; 
born  of  the  same  book,  the  same  age, 
the   same   ignorance.   Truth   Seeker  43: 
801-3  Dec  16,  1916 
TS 

Unique  blasphemy  case;  in  New  Jersey 
it  is  unlawful  to  get  too  close  up  to 
God  and  Tesus.  Truth  Seeker  47:170-71 
March    13,    1920 

Ridicules  conviction  of  Mason  T.  Huntsman 
alias  Paul  Blaudin  Mnason  as  a  blasphemer  for 
having  permitted  himself  to  be  worshipped  as  a 
son  of  God  and  for  pronouncing  false  judgments. 

Word    with    truthseekers.    Truth    Seeker 
45:121    Feb  23,    1918 
TS 

Concerns  Mockus  blasphemy  case. 

Seymour,    Horatio 

Recent  case  in  the  House  of  lords.  [Bow- 
man   v.    Secular   society.    Appeal    Cases 
1917:406]     Chicago    Legal    News    51:27 
Aug  22,  1918 
ILP    18 

Snyder,  William  Lamartine,  1848- 

(ed.)  Great  speeches  by  great  lawyers;  a 
collection  of  arguments  and  speeches 
before  courts  and  juries;  by  eminent 
lawyers;  with  introductory  notes,  an- 
alyses, etc.  New  York,  Baker,  Voor- 
his  &  CO  1881  xvi,748p 

Pinkney,  William.  Law  of  constructive  treason, 
P38-46,  in  the  defense  of  John  Hodges;  Erskine, 
Thomas,  for  the  prosecution  of  Thomas  Williams, 
P55I-66,  for  publishing  Paine's  "Age  of  reason:" 
Mackintosh,  James.  In  behalf  of  Jean  Peltier, 
P567-6I2,  indicted  for  a  libel  against  Napoleon 
Bonaparte. 

— Same.   New   York,   Baker,   Voorhis   &  co. 

1890 
TS 

Southwell,    Charles 

Plain  answer  to  the  query,  "Ought  there 
to  be  a  law  against  blasphemy?"  Bir- 
mingham, J.  Tavlor  1842  23p 

NY 

Trial  of  Charles  Southwell,  (editor  of 
The  Oracle  of  Reason")  for  blasphemy 
.  .  .  January  the  14th,  1842  .  .  .  Lon- 
don,   Hetherington    1842    104p 

NY 

Convicted.    Received    one    yrar    in    orison    and 
£  too  fine. 

Spira,  Francesco 

The  second  Spira,  or  the  blasphemers  re- 
proved: setting  forth  an  example  of 
God's  judgments  on  six  profane  young 
men     at     Brodney     in     Somersetshire. 


160 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


B 


[Anon]  To  which  is  added,  A  sermon 
preached  on  the  occasion  by  the  Rev 
Mr  Simmons.  Birmingham,  Printed  by 
S.  Martin   [1810?]   8p 


Starr,  Samuel 

Blasphemy  against  the  Holy  Ghost;  an 
essay.  (In:  Associate  alumni  of  the 
General  theological  seminary  of  the 
Protestant  Episcopal  church  in  the 
United  States,  p21-31.  New  York  1840) 

B  NY 

Steiner,  Franklin 

Old  Bailey  prisoners;  an  account  of  some 
who  went  there  a  generation  ago  as 
"blasphemers."  Truth  Seeker  44:769-70 
Dec  8,  1917 

Deals  mainly  with  case  of  G.  W.  Foote  and  re- 
produces his  portrait. 

Stephen,  Sir  James  Fitzjames,  bart.,   1829- 
1894 

Blasphemy  and  blasphemous  libel.   Fort- 
nightly Review  41:289-318  March,   1884 
Y 

Talfourd,   Thomas   Noon,    1795-1854 

Laws  against  blasphemy;  speech  for  the 
defendant  in  the  prosecution  of  the 
Queen  v.  Moxon,  for  the  publication  of 
Shelley's  works,  delivered  in  the  Court 
of  Queen's  bench,  June  23,  1841  and 
revised  by  T.  N.  Talfourd,  sergeant  at 
law.  London  1841 

Speech  for  the  defendant,  in  the  prosecu- 
tion of  the  Queen  v.  Moxon,  for  the  pub- 
lication of  Shelley's  works  .  .  .  London, 
Edward    Moxon    1841    58p 

NY 

The  offending  piece  was:   Queen  Mab. 

Taylor,  Edgar 

Religious  offenses  indictable  at  common 
law.  (Reprint  from  Monthly  Repository 
1817,  and  in  criticism  of  Attorney  Gen- 
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Taylor,  Robert,  1784-1844 

Judgment  of  the  Court  of  King's  bench 
upon  the  Rev  Robert  Taylor  on  a  con- 
viction of  blasphemy  toward  the  Chris- 
tian religion;  with  the  whole  of  the 
speeches  in  this  case,  on  the  7th  of 
February,  1828.  London,  R.  Carlile 
[1828?]    16p 

NY 

Trial  of  the  Reverend  Robert  Taylor,  A. 
B.  M.  R.  C.  S.  upon  a  charge  of  blas- 
phemy, with  his  defence  as  delivered 
by  himself  .  .  .  October  24,  1827.  Lon- 
don, J.  Carlile  1827  31p 
NY   Y 

Thacher,  Peter  Oxenbridge 

Charge  to  the  grand  jury  of  the  county 
of  Suffolk,  for  the  commonwealth  of 
Massachusetts,  at  the  opening  of  the 
Municipal  court  of  the  city  of  Boston, 
on  the  first  Monday  of  December,  A.  D. 
1832.  Boston,  Stimpson  &  Clapp  1832 
22p 
B 


Tunbridge,   William 

Report  of  the  proceedings,  in  the  mock 
trial  of  an  information  .  .  .  against  W. 
Tunbridge,  publication  of  a  book  called 
Palmer's  principles  of  nature,  as  an  al- 
leged blasphemous  libel  upon  the  Chris- 
tion  religion,  and  the  Holy  Scriptures, 
of  the  Jews  and  Christians  ...  to 
which  is  added  the  whole  of  the  sup- 
pressed part  of  the  defendant's  defence 
.  .  .  London,  R.  Carlile  1823  160p 
NY 

Waitham,   [Robert]    1764-1833 

Trial  by  jury  and  liberty  of  the  press; 
the  proceedings  at  the  public  meeting, 
December  29,  1817  .  .  .  for  the  purpose 
of  enabling  William  Hone  to  surmount 
the  difficulties  in  which  he  has  been 
placed  by  being  selected  by  the  minis- 
ters of  the  Crown  as  the  object  of 
their  persecution.  London,  W.  Hone 
1818  26p 

NY 

Whitehead,  William  Bailey 

Prosecutions       of      infidel      blasphemers 
briefly  vindicated  in  a  letter  to   David 
Ricardo.  2d   ed  with   cor   London    1823 
[Pamphleteer  22:495-520] 
B 

Wilkinson,  Louis  Umfreville 

Blasphemy  and  religion;  a  dialogue  about 
John  Cowper  Powys'  Wood  and  stone, 
and  Theodore  Powys'  The  soliloquy  of 
a  hermit  .  .  .  New  York,  G.  A.  Shaw 
[cl916]  [12]p 
LC 

Wright,  John 

Sermon  delivered  at  the  Long  Room, 
Marble  street,  Liverpool,  on  .  .  .  April 
8th,  1817  .  .  .  for  which  a  prosecution 
is  commenced  on  a  charge  of  blas- 
phemy. Liverpool,  F.  B.  Wright  1817 
26p 
NY 

After  this  publication  of  the  offending  sermon 
the  prosecution  was  discontinued. 

Wyclifife,  John,  ca   1324-1384 

Johannis  Wyclif  tractatus  de  blasphemia; 

now   first   edited   from   the   Vienna   ms. 

4514;    with    notes    by    Michael    Henry 

Dziewicki.  London,  Triibner  &  co.  1893 

xxxx,295p 
B   NY  Y 


Church  and  State 

Address  to  Protestant-dissenters  of  all  de- 
nominations on  the  approaching  elec- 
tion of  members  to  Parliament,  with 
respect  to  the  state  of  public  liberty 
in  general,  and  of  American  affairs  in 
particular.   London,  J.  Johnson   1774 

Allen,   Zachariah,    1795-1882 

Bi-centcnary  of  the  burning  of  Providence 
in    1676;    defence    of   the    Rhode    Island 


FREE  SPEECH 


161 


system  of  treatment  of  the  Indians,  and 
of    civil    and    religious    liberty.    Provi- 
dence, R.I.,   Providence  press  company 
1876  34p 
LC  TS 

Mas   very   little   on    religious   liberty. 

American  secular  union  and  free  thought 
federation 
Answers  in  reply  to  protests  against  our 
literature  which  was  prepared  for  cir- 
culation to  show  the  folly  and  illegality 
of  Bible  reading  in  the  public  schools. 
Chicago,  American  secular  union  [1903] 
24p 

Anne  Bolcyn;  or,  The  suppression  of  the 
religious  houses.  London?  1854 

Archbishop's     committee     on     church    and 
state 
Report,  with  appendices.  London,  Society 
for  promoting  Christian  knowledge  1916 
304p 

Arguments  of  J.  M.  Wilson,  A.  B.  Carl- 
so.n  and  Bp  Nathan  Budge,  in  opposi- 
tion to  the  constitution  of  the  proposed 
state  of  Idaho.  Adopted  at  Boise  Citv. 
Aug  6,  1889.  Washington  1890  41  p 

Deals  with  aiiti-Mortnon  clause  of  constitution. 

Arkansas  disqualifies  "Agnostic"'  witnesses. 
Truth  Seeker  45:591    Sept   14,   1918 

Account  of  debate  in  Arkansas  constitutional 
convention. 

[Backus,  Isaac]  1724-1806 
Policy,  as  well  as  honesty,  forbids  the 
use  of  secular  force  in  religious  affairs 
.  .  .  Boston,  Printed  by  Draper  and  Fol- 
som,  and  sold  bv  Phillip  Freeman  in 
Union-street  1779  26p 

LC 

Bancroft,   Aaron 

Nature  and  worth  of  Christian  liberty. 
Worcester  1816 

HCL 

— Same.    2d    ed    Worcester    1816 

HCL 

[Bannon,   Fred] 

Romish  plot  to  scourge  heretics  goes 
"over  the  top"  in  Detroit.  Mich.  One 
salesman  for  the  Menace  arrested  four 
times  in  one  day  before  mayor  could 
sign  anti-heretic  ordinance  and  make 
it  effective.  The  Menace  July  6,  1918 
1-1 

Bautain,  Louis  Eugene  Marie,  1769-1867 
Religion   et  la  libertc.   Paris   1865 

HCL 

Bishop,   Abraham 

Proofs  of  a  conspiracy  against  Christian- 
ity and  the  government  of  the  United 
States;  exhibited  in  several  views  of 
church  and  states  in  New  England. 
Hartford  1802 

■Rishop  w.is  friend  to  Jefferson  and  leader  of 
the  Connecticut  movement  for  a  constitution  and 
abolition  of  union  of  church  and  state. 

Bonner.     Hypatia     Bradlaugh,     1858-.     and 
Robertson.  John  M. 
Record    of   the   life   and   work   of   Charles 
Hradlaush;  with  an  accoimt  of  his  par- 


liamentary struggle,  politics  and  teach- 
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T.   F.    Unwin    1895   2v 
NY 

Bradlaugh  made  great  historic  fight  for  right 
of  an  infidel  to  sit  in  House  of  commons.  Also 
was  arrested  for  distributing  birth  control  in- 
formation  alleged   to  be   "obscene." 

See  Bradlaugh  v.  Queen,  Law  Reports,  Queen's 
Bench  Division  3:607;  2:569.  For  blasphemy  see 
R.  V.  Bradlaugh,  Cox  Criminal  Cases  15:217-25; 
W'horton,  Criminal  law,  3:2116-18.  He  won  out 
in  all  three  cases. 

[Bowdler,   Thomas]    1754-1825 

Liberty,   civil   and   religious;    by  a   friend 
to  both.   London,  J.  Hatchard  1815  73p 
NY 

Bretschneider,   Karl   Gottlieb 

Sendschreiben  an   einen   staatsmann  uber 

die  frage:  Ob  evangclische  rcgierungen 

gegen  den  rationalismus  einzuschreiten 

haben?    Leipzig,   F.   C.   W.   Vogel    1830 

HCL 

Zweites    sendschreiben    an    einen    staats- 
mann.   Leipzig,    F.    C.    W.    Vogel    1830 
HCL 

Brodhead,  Jane  Milliken  Napier 

Religious  persecution  in  France  1900-1906. 
London,    K.    Paul,   Trench,   Triibner    & 
CO.    1907  viii,260p 
LC  TS 

"The.^e   considerations,   written   during   the   last 
■     six  years'  residence  in  France,"  present  the  papal 
viewpoint    against    disestablishment    in    favor    of 
"a  theocracy." 

Brook,  Benjamin 

History  of  religious  liberty  from  the  first 
propagation  of  Christianity  in  Britain 
to  the  death  of  George  III.  including 
its  successive  state,  beneficial  influence 
and  powerful  interruptions.  London,  F. 
Westerly  p.d.  1820  2v 
NY  TS  Y 

Lives  of  the  Puritans,  containing  a  bio- 
graphical account  of  those  divines  who 
distinguished  themselves  in  the  cause 
of  religious  liberty,  from  the  Refor- 
mation under  Queen  Elizabeth  to  the 
.Act  of  uniformitv  in  1662.  London  1813 
3v 
Broughan  and  Vaux.  Henry  Peter  Brough- 
an,   1st  baron,    1778-1868 

Observations  on  Mr  Broughan's  bill  "For 
better  providing  the  means  of  education 
for  his  Majesty's  subjects,"  showing  its 
inadequacy  to  the  end  proposed,  and 
the  danger  which  will  arise  from  it  to 
the  cause  of  religious  liberty.  London, 
Baldwin.  Cradock  &  Joy  1821  30p 

Religious  liberty  bill;  speech  July  27. 
1855:  with  the  bill  schedules  and  notes. 
London  1855 

Brown,  Benjamin  F. 

Earlv     religious     liistory     of     Maryland: 

Maryland  not  a  Roman  Catholic  colony. 

religious      toleration      not     an      act     of 

Roman  Catholic  legislation.   Baltimore, 

Innes  &  co.   1876  34p 
LC 


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TS 

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LC 

Dewey,  Benoni,  and  others 
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NYHS 

Eaton,   Charles 

Hierarchs  meet  in  Washington  to  inter- 
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TS 

Quotes     and     discusses     the     Roman     Catholic 
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FREE  SPEECH 


163 


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Freeman,  Daniel 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  state  of 
Nebraska.  [The  state  of  Nebraska  ex 
rel  Daniel  Freeman,  plaintiff  in  error, 
V.  John  Schevc,  Henry  D.  Odcll,  and 
Matilda  CoUett,  as  members  of  the  dis- 
trict board  of  school  district  no.  21 
in  the  county  of  Gage  and  state  of 
Nebraska,  defendants  in  error.]  Brief 
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TS 

Deals  with  the  use  of  the  Bible  in  the  public 
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French    editor    punished.    Jeffersonian     Tan 

24,  1914  p7 
TS 

Criticises  punishment  of  Frenchman  for  enter- 
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Geffcken,  Heinrich 

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Gordon,  John 

Non-conformity  and  liberty;  letters  ad- 
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Governor  Hammond  appoints  special  pros- 
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church;  sends  M.  C.  Brady,  Catholic 
attorney  of  Minneapolis,  to  Benson, 
Minn.,  at  the  public  expense,  to  try  and 
railroad  critic  of  the  Catholic  church 
into  jail  and  abuses  the  power  vested 
in  him  by  the  people  of  the  state.  Min- 
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TS 

A  socialist  lecturer  was  arrested  on  a  com- 
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Healy,  Patrick  Joseph,  1872-1910 

Valerian  persecution:  a  study  of  the  re- 
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TS 

Quotes  End  discusses  views  of  Archbishop 
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— and  Breckinridge,  John 

Discussion  of  the  question,  Is  the  Roman 
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principles  or  doctrines  inimical  to  civil 
or  religious  liberty?  And  of  the  ques- 
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any  or  in  all  its  principles  or  doctrines, 
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Hunt,  Gaillard 

James     Madison     and     religious     liberty. 
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Jenkins,  J.  _  ,  •         , 

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HCL? 

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Idaho  Test  oath  argument  delivered  in 
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Relates  to  oath  designed  to  exclude  Mormons 
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Kingsbury,  Harmon 

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B  LC  NY 

Klein,  Arthur  Jay,  1884- 

Intolerance  in  the  reign  of  Elizabeth, 
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LC 

Krossnogeon,  Michail 

Religious  freedom  in  Russia.  Constructive 
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Lecky,    WUliam    Edward    Hartpole,    1838- 
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LC 

Influence  of  separation  of  church  and  state, 
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Longmans,   Green    &   co.    1903   2v 
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TS 

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TS 

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TS 

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Rhode,  Paul 

Wider  die  kirchenherrschaft  iiber  die  all- 
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TS 

Persecution  and  "frame  up"  resulted  from 
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Roosevelt,  Theodore,  1858-1919 

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Letter  from  Theo.  Roosevelt  on  religious  test 
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Church    and   state   in   the    LInited   States: 
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Blasphcmy  and  free  speech,  being  sample 
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1918  53p 
TS 

Democracy    yet    to    be;    under    its    reign 
there    will    be    no    "spiritual"    or    other 
pretensions  upheld  by  law.  Truth  Seek- 
er 44:785-6   Dec    15.   1917 
TS 

Prayer  in  the  legislature.  Salt  Lake  Her- 
ald Jan  23,   1896 
TS 

Letter  objecting  on  constitutional  grounds  to 
public  prayers   paid   from   public  taxes. 


FREE  SPEECH 


165 


I 


To   the   rescue   of    Clark.    Menace    no.   30 
Nov  11.  1911 
TS 

Clark  was  arrested  for  "obscenity"  in  the  ex- 
posure of  political  Romanism.  The  occasion  was 
his  book;   Hell  at   midnight  in   Springfield,  111. 

Wisconsin  Alumni  magazine.  17:162-3  Feb, 
1916 
TS 

Without  title,  there  is  a  discussion  of  the  case 
of  Prof.  M.  C.  Otto,  involving  freedom  of  teach- 
ing philosophy  of  indirect  irreligious  tendency. 

Sectarian    issue    in     Pennsylvania.    Menace 

415:1    April   12,    1919 
TS 

$5,000,000  public  money  given  to  Romanism. 

"Secular    morality."    American    Sentinel    5: 

386  Dec  11,  1890 
TS 

An  editorial  on  eflfort  of  Dr  Westbrook  and 
American  Secular  union  to  provide  substitute 
for   teaching   religious   morality  in   public   schools. 

Shaftesbury,  [Anthony  Ashley  Cooper] 
1801-1885 
Religious  liberty  in  Turkey;  the  speech 
of  the  Earl  of  Shaftesbury  in  the  House 
of  lords  on  Friday,  March  10th,  on  the 
manifesto  of  the  Emperor  of  Russia. 
2d  ed  London,  J.  Murray  1854  30p 

JX 

Sikes,  Thomas 

Dialogue  between  a  minister  and  liis 
parishoners,  concerning  the  Christian 
liberty  of  choosing  his  teacher.  3d  ed 
London    1804 

Smith,  Gerrit,  1797-1874 

Abstract  of  the  argument  in  the  public 
discussion  of  the  question  "Are  the 
Christians  of  a  given  community  of  the 
church  of  such  community?"  in  Hamil- 
ton, N.Y.,  April  12-14th,  1847.  Albany, 
S.   Green   1847  38p 

B  NY  Y 

Religious  liberty,  but  rather  scattered.  Most 
sectarianism. 

Stanley,    Arthur    Penrhyn,    1815-1881 

Essays  chiefly  on  questions  of  church  and 
state,  1850-1870.  London,  J.  Murrav 
1870 

Steiner,  Franklin 

Exclusion  of  the  Truth  Seeker.  Truth 
Seeker  45:634-35  Oct  5,   1918 

Several  issues  of  the  Truth  Seeker  were  ex- 
cluded from  the  mails  for  criticising  the  Y.  M. 
C.  A.,  it  being  held  that  this  Christian  organi- 
zation is  part  of  the  military  establishment  of 
the  U.S.  and  during  the  war  it  is  therefore  sedi- 
tious to  make  criticism.  Commented  on  in:  The 
Nation,  under  title  "A  humble  inquiry."  This 
l.ittcr  (luotcd  in   The  Call. 

Stille,  Charles  Janeway 

Religious  tests  in  provincial  Pennsylvania; 
a  paper  read  before  the   Historical  so- 
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HCL 

Stoughton,    John 

Church  and  state  two  hundred  years  ago; 
a  history  of  ecclesiastical  affairs  in  Eng- 


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son.   Walford    &    Hodder    1862   xv,467p 
TS 

Exhaustive  historical  account.  Chapter  12, 
Conformist  and  nonconformist;  chapter  13, 
Striving  for  toleration;  chapter  14,  Persecution. 
See  also  appendix. 

Swanwick,  J. 

Considerations  on  an  act  of  the  legisla- 
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the  establishment  of  religious  freedom; 
by  a  citizen  of  Philadelphia.  Philadel- 
phia 1786 
HCL 

Thompson,  Joseph   Parrish,   1819-1879 

Church    and    state    in    the    United    States, 
lioston.  J.   R.   Osgood   &  co.   1873   166p 
NY 

Toulman,    Joshua,    1740-1815 

Historical  review  of  the  state  of  the 
Protestant  dissenters  in  England  under 
King  William.  London   1814 

Chapter  s  contains  a  review  of  theological  pub- 
lications, many  of  them  on  toleration. 

Tullsen,    H. 

Oliver  case.  Truth   Seeker  46:576  Sept  6, 
1919 
TS 

Oliver,  a  teacher  at  Gore,  Oklahoma,  was  dis- 
missed  for   liberal   religious   sentiments. 

Turner,  Henry  E[dward] 

Settlers  of  Aquidneck,  and  liberty  of 
conscience;  read  before  the  Rhode 
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lishing CO.  1880  54p 
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UnderhUl,  E.  B. 

Struggles  and  triumphs  of  religious  lib- 
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sies pertaining  to  rights  of  conscience 
from  the  English  reformation  to  the 
settlement  of  New  England.  New  York 
1851   242p 

Vinet,  Alexandre 

Liberte   religieuseet   questions  ecclesias- 
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HCL 

VioUet,  Edouard 

Les    cstablisscmcnts    congreganists    et    la 
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Oudin    1903    139p 
NY 

Walsh.   Patrick 

Civil  and  religious  liberty;  the  rights  and 

privileges     of     American     citizens.  .  .  . 

n.t.p.     Augusta.     [Ga.]     Chronicle     job 

printing  co.   [1896]  39p 
NY 
Ward.   Bernard   Nicholas,    1857- 

Sequel    to    Catholic    emancipation:    1830- 

50    New  York.  Longmans,  Green  &  co. 

1915  2v 

Ward.  Percy 

.■\theism  and  Americanism;  they  are  ex- 
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46:734  Dec  27,  1919 
TS 

Reports  case  of  Jacob  Sacks  and  Albert  Struve, 
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TS 

Volume  13,  pi 36-8,  contains  Wesley's  remarks 
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Willson,   I.   B. 

History  of  the   church  and   state  in   Nor- 
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Long  editorial  on  the  expulsion  of  Charles  A. 
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Cooper,  Thomas,    1759-1840 

Defence  of  Dr  Cooper,  before  the  trustees 
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Himes.    C.    F.    Life    and    times    of   Judge 
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TS 

Contains  brief  reference  to  trial  for  sedition. 
Also  longer  account  of  trial  for  teaching  heresy 
to  the  students  of  Columbia  [S.C.]  college. 
Being  published  during  the  world  war  the  author 
feared  to  discuss  Cooper's  conviction  under  Alien 
and  sedition  law. 

Davis,   William   Franklin 

Christian  liberties  in  Boston;  a  sketch 
of  recent  attempts  to  destroy  them 
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HCL  TS 
Supreme  court  of  the  United  States;  Oc- 
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state  of  Massachusetts;  brief  of  James 
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TS 

Decided  in  Massachusetts  'Reports  162:510; 
and  United  States  Reports   167:43. 

Doane,  George  Washington,   1799-1859 
Trial    of    Bishoi)    Doane,    of    N.J.    epistle 
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Episcopal  court  at  Camden.   New  York 
1853  74p 

Faulkner,  John  Alfred,  1857- 

Should  the  ministerial  heretic  leave  his 
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1911 


FREE  SPEECH 


167 


Fawkes,  Alfred 

Famous   heresy   trial.    Edinburgh    Review 
216:202-15  July,  1912 
RG  '10-14 
Fish,  William  Henry 

Ecclesiastical    excommunications;    a    ser- 
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HCL 

Free  press  defence  league's  victory  a  stun- 
ning blow  to  pro-papal  censorship.  The, 
patriots  of  Saginaw,  Michigan,  rejoice 
over  decisive  court  victory  in  the  au- 
ditorium case.  Board  of  trustees  had 
abridged  freedom  of  speech  and  as- 
sembly in  denying  patriots  use  of  hall 
.  .  .  Menace,  no.  320  June  9,  1917  pi 

TS 

Free  press  defense  league  was  devoted  to  pro- 
tecting anti-Romanist  propaganda. 

Ganss,  H.  G. 

Reformer  and  the  persecution  of  heretics. 
Messenger  44:327-44  Oct,  1905 
TS 

Presents     Catholic     viewpoint     and     historical 
treatment  of  religious  liberty. 

Gates,   Errett,    1870- 

Another   case    of   discipline    in    the    Prus- 
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Journal  of  Theology  17:89-93  Jan,  1913 
RGS  '07-15 

New   Prussian   heresy   law  and  its  work- 
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241-55  April,   1912 
RG  '10-14 

Pastoral   freedom   in    Germany:    liturgical 
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RG   '10-14 

Gladden,   Washington 

Natural     history    of    the     heresy    hunter. 
Christian    Literature   5:73-9   1891 
PAR 

Gorham  case:  judgment  delivered,  1850; 
substance  of  a  speech  before  the  judi- 
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Apology  for  the  plain  sense  of  the 
doctrine  of  the  prayer  book  on  holy 
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[Grant,  M.  R.] 

Americanism      vs.      Roman      Catholicism. 
Meridan.    Miss.,    Truth    publishing    co. 
1920    173p 
TS 

Chapter     to    quotes     Romanist    dignitaries    on 
their  divine  authority  to  establish  a  censorship. 

Gray,   Andrew,    1805-1861 

Duty  and  the  liberty  of  a  Christian  as- 
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HCL 

Great  Britain.  Parliament  (.1825)  House  of 
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House  of  commons,  June  23,  1825,  on 
Mr  Burton  s  motion  relative  to  the 
demolition  of  the  Methodist  chapel  and 
mission  house  in  Barbados,  and  the  ex- 


pulsion of  Mr  Shrewsbury,  a  Wesleyan 
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1825 
HCL 

Heinemann,  Franz 

Inquisition,  intoleranz,  exkommunication, 
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hexenwahn  und  hexenprozesse,  recht- 
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NY 

.  .  .  Inquisition,  intolerance,  excommuni- 
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sectes  et  sectaires,  sorccllerie  et  proces 
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Hendriks,    Dom    Laurence 

The     Carthusian     martyrs    under     Henry 
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TS 

Pro-Catholic    and   historical    treatment. 

Henson,   H.    H. 

Sincerity  and  subscription,  a  pica  for  tol- 
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Henson,   Herbert  Hensley,   1863- 

Liberty  of  prophesying,  with  its  just 
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New  Haven,  Conn.,  Yale  university 
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LC  Y 

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RG  '16 

Heresy  of  Union  seminary.  Literary  Digest 

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Himes,  Charles  F. 

Life  and  times  of  Judge  Thomas  Cooper, 
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TS 

Lepage,   Francis 

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Theater 

Address  to  the  public,  on  the  immorality 
of  theatrical  amusements,  n.t.p.,  n.p., 
n.d.  8p 

B 

Aiken.   Samuel    Clark 

Theatrical   exhibitions;   a   sermon.   Cleve- 
land, O.,  Penniman   1836  17-19p 

B 

—Same.  Utica,  X.Y.   1825  24p 

Y 

Alt,  Heinrich 

Theater   und    kirche    in   ihrem   gegenseit- 
igen   verhaltniss,    historisch    dargestellt. 
Berlin,    Flahnsche    buchhandlung    1846 
vi,704,viip 
LC 

Archer,  William 

About  the  theatre:  essays  and  studies. 
London,  T.  F.  Unwin   1886  350p 

Chapter  2,  pioi-71,  The  censorship  of  the  stage. 

Attempt  to  establish  a  play-house  in  New 
Hampshire,  1762.  (Petitions  for  and 
against  the  project,  and  the  Assembly's 
address  to  prevent  acting  plays.)  (New 
Hampshire  hist.  soc.  coll.  v5)  Concord, 
X.H.  1837  247-50p 

B 

Ballein,  Johannes  H. 

Jeremy  Collier's  Angrifif  auf  die  englischc 

biihne.     Marburg,     Fricdrich     1909     xii, 

107p 
Y 

Best.  Thomas,   1787-1865 

Sermons    on    theatrical    amusements    .  .  . 
ed.  by  R.  E.  Roberts  .  .  .  London  [etc.] 
1865   ix,293p 
Y 

Brainerd,  Thomas 

Inriuence    of    theatres.    IMiiladelphia    1840 
16p 
B 

Buckley,   James    Monroe,    1836- 

Christians    and    the    theater.    New    York, 
Nelson  &  Phillips  1876  156p 
B 

Censorship  of  plays.  Quarterlv   Review  no. 

213:352-76   1910 
Y 

[Censorship     of     the     stage.]     Blackwood's 

Magazine    186:852-6   1909 
Y 

Clergy  and  the  theatre.  Macmillan's  Maga- 
zine vZ7  1889-90 

[Cole.  John  William] 

Defence  of  the  stage;  or,  An  enquiry  into 
the  real  qualities  of  theatrical  entertain- 
ments, their  scope  and  tendency:  be- 
ing a  reply  to  a  sermon  entitled  "The 
evil  of  theatrical  entertainments  stated 
and  illustrated"  .  .  .  by  the  Rev  Dr 
John  R.  Bennett;  includincr  an  exam- 
ination of  the  authorities  on  wliich  tliat 


sermon   is   founded;   by  John   William 
Calcraft    [pseud.]     Dublin.    Milliken    & 
son   1839  vii,175p 
LC  Y 

Cotarelo  y  Mori,  Emilio 

Bibliografia  de  las  controversias  sobre  la 
licitud  del  teatro  en  Espano.  Madrid, 
Est.  tip.  de  la  "Reo.  de  archives,  bibl. 
y   museos"    1904   739p 

B    Y 

Defence  of  the  drama,  containing  Mansel's 
Free  thoughts,  extracts  from  the  most 
celebrated  writers,  and  a  discourse  on 
the  lawfulness  &  unlawfulness  of  plays; 
by  the  celebrated  Father  Caffaro  .  .  . 
New  York,  G.  Champley  1826  294p 

LC  Y 

Denman,    John 

Drama    vindicated;    with    copious    notes. 
Cambridge  [1835]   120p 
Y 

Dwight,   Timothy,   1752-1817 

Essay  on  the  stage:  in  which  the  argu- 
ments in  its  behalf,  and  tho.>e  against 
it,  are  considered;  and  its  morality, 
character  and  effects  illustrated.  Mid- 
dletown,  Conn.,  printed.  London,  Re- 
printed for  Sharp,  Jones  &  co.  1824  [10], 
166p 

B   Y 

Examining     the     examiner.     Nation    89:147 

Aug  12,  1909 
Y 

Review  of  the  testimony  of  George  A.  Red- 
ford,  examiner  of  plays  in  England,  before  the 
joint  Committee  of  Lords  and  Commons  on  the 
censorship. 

Fitz-Gerald.   W.   G. 

Dramatic  censorship  in  England.  Harper's 
Weekly    51:947    1907 
Y 
Ford,  James  Lauren,  1854- 

Plea  for  the  free  theater.  Munsey's  Mag- 
azine 28:148-52  Oct,  1902 
Y 

G..  M.  G. 

Stage   censor;   an  historical  sketch:   1544- 
1907.  London   \9'^%  I28p 
Y 
Great   Britain.   Statutes 

Ordinance  of  the  Lords  and  Commons 
assembled  in  Parliament  for  the  utter 
suppression  and  abolishing  of  all  stage- 
plays  and  interludes  .  .  .  Imprinted  at 
London  for  J.  Wright,  1647.  London 
•1869  5p 
B  Y 
GrevUle,  Robert  Kaye,   1794-1866 

Appeal    to    Christians    on    the    subject    of 
dramatic  entertainments  .  .  .  Edinburgh 
1830    I2p 
Y 

Drama   brought   to   the   test  of  Scripture 
and  found  wanting.  [.\non]   Edinburgh, 
Oliphant    1830   131p 
B 


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Hale,  David.   1791-1849 

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15p 
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Hatfield.  Robert  M. 

The  theater:  its  character  and  influence; 
an  address.  Chicago,  Methodist  book 
deposit  1866  40p 

B 

Henin  de  Cuvillers,  fitienne  Felix  d',  baron 
Des  comediens,  et  du  clerge;  suivi  de  re- 
flexions   sur    Ic    mandement    de    Mon- 
seigncur    I'archeveque    de    Rousen    .  .  . 
Paris   1825  x,427p 

Y 

Housman.  Laurence  . 

A  King's  proctor  for  plays.  Fortnightly 
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Leeds,  Josiah  W. 
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thor  1884  85p 

B  NY  Y 

—Same.  [3d  ed]  1886 

B 

Murray,    Lindley,    1745-1826 

(comp.)  Extracts  from  the  writings  of 
divers  eminent  authors,  of  different  re- 
ligious denominations;  and  at  various 
periods  of  time,  representing  the  evils 
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Palmer,  John  Leslie,  1885- 

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Unwin    1912  307p 

LC 

"The  larger  half  of  the  present  essay  is  based 
upon  the  evidence  given  before  the  Joint  select 
committee  of  1909.  .  .  .  After  discussing  the 
origin  of  censorship,  and  .  .  .  the  law  as  it 
stands  today,  I  propose  to  group  the  evidence 
for  and  against  the  censor,  to  outline  .  .  .  the 
.  .  .  remedies  .  .  .  and  to  sum  up  ...  in  favor 
of  the  .  .  .  remedy  of  abolition,  and  the  single 
licence  for  theater  and  dance-hall."     Preface 

— Same.     New    York,     Mitchell     Kennerley 

1913    307p 
TS 

Plays  that  Catholics  censor.  Literary  Digest 

53:1603-4  Dec   16,   1916 
RG    17 

Plumptre,  James,    1770-1832 

Four  discourses  on  subjects  relating  to 
the  amusement  of  the  stage:  preached 
at  Great  St  Mary's  church,  Cambridge 
[Eng.]  1808;  with  copious  supplemen- 
tary notes.  Cambridge,  England  Printed 
by  F.  Hodson,  for  F.  C.  &  J.  Rivington 
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LC    Y 


Press  of  New  York  on  the  law  against 
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both  committee.  Doc.  13)  [New  York 
I860?]   24p 

B    NY 

Styles,    John 

An  essay  on  the  character  and  influence 
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2d  ed  London,  Williams  &  Smith   1807 
xi,188p 
B  NY  Y 

Testimonies  of  pagans,  of  infidels,  of  Chris- 
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tendency  of  theatrical  amusements;  by 
a  clergyman.  2d  ed  enl  Sheffield  1819 
16p 

Y 

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Y 

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.  .  .    The    controversy    between    the    Pur- 
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Y 

Thompson,  Joseph   Parrish,   1819-1879 
Theatrical    amusements;    a    discourse    on 
the     character     and     influence     of     the 
theatre.    New   York,    Baker   &  Scribner 
1847  40p 

B  NY  Y 

Tree,  Viola 

Censorship    of    stage    plays.     Nineteenth 
Century   67:164-72    1910 
Y 

Turnbull.    Robert,    1809-1877 

The  theatre,  in  its  influence  upon  litera- 
ture,   morals    and     religion.     Hartford, 
[Conn.]   Carf^eld  &  R.  1837  58p 
B 

—Same.  2d  ed  Boston,  Gould  1839  vi,9-110p 
B  NY 

Vignaud.  Jean 

Un  precurseur  du  theatre  libre  en  1773. 
Revue  d'Art  Dramatique  n  s  5:335-44 
1898 

Witherspoon.    John,    1723-1794 

Serious  inquiry  into  the  nature  and  ef- 
fects of  the  stage:  and  a  letter  res- 
pecting play  actors  .  .  .  Also  a  serrnon 
on  the  burning  of  the  theatre  at  Rich- 
mond; by  Samuel  Miller  .  .  .  together 
with  an  introductory  address,  by  sev- 
eral ministers  in  New  York,  etc  New 
York.  Whiting  &  Watson  1812  [5]-199p 

B  LC  NY  Y 


FREE  SPEECH 


171 


Part  VII.     Sedition 


After  1800  and  other  than  under  Alien  and 
Sedition  law.  Everything  hereunder  covered  in 
one    alphabetical    arrangement. 

Abbott,  Lawrence  Fraser,   1859- 

Roosevelt    libel    suit.    Outlook    104:325-9 
June  14,   1913 
RG  '10-14 

[Abuses  of  the  press;  review  of  A  treatise 
on  the  offense  of  libel,  with  a  dis- 
quisition on  the  right,  benefit  and 
proper  boundaries  of  political  discus- 
sion, by  John  George.  London,  1812] 
Edinburgh   Review  22:72-88   1813 

Y 

Aldred,  Guy  A. 

Dogmas  discarded,  revised,  extended,  and, 
in  parts,  abridged  from  an  autobiogra- 
phical fragment  published  in  1908:  au- 
thor's 1909  trial  for  sedition  affixed. 
London,    Bakunin   press    1913   31p 

TS 

Anarchy  on  trial:  being  the  speeches  of 
George  Etievant  (sentenced  to  five 
years  imprisonment  on  a  charge  of 
stealing  dynamite  cartridges),  Jean 
Grave  (sentenced  to  lYz  years  for  pub- 
lishing his  famous  book  Societe  mour- 
ant  et-  I'anarchie)  and  Caserio  Santo 
(who  killed  President  Carnot),  in  1894. 
Freedom  pamphlets,  no.  9)  London, 
Freedom   office    1896  30p 

TS 

Bacon.  Francis  (of  Verulam) 

Of  seditions  and  troubles.  New  Republic 
19:419-20  July   30,    1919 

Fine  statement  of  expediency  of  permitting 
free  expression  of  discontent  and  removing  the 
■cause  instead  of  the  complaint. 

Baudouin,    Alexandre 

Anecdotes  historiques  du  temps  de  la 
Restauration  suivies  dc  recherches  sur 
I'origine  de  la  presse,  son  developpe- 
mcnt.  son  influence  sur  les  esprits,  ses 
rapports  avec  I'opinion  publique,  les 
mesures  restrictives  apportees  a  son 
exercise.    Paris,  Didot  freres   1853   I72p 

Bettman,  Alfred,  and  Hale,  Swinburne 

Do  we  need  more  sedition  laws?  Testi- 
mony of  Alfred  Bettman  and  Swinburne 
Hale,  late  captain  military  intelligence 
division,  general  staff,  U.  S.  A  ,  before 
the  House  of  representatives.  New  York 
City.  Published  by  the  American  Civil 
Liberties  Union  1920  22p 

Bignel,  M.  A. 

Report  of  the  meeting  of  the  inhabitants 
of  Calcutta  held  5th  January,  1835,  to 
take  into  consideration  the  propriety  of 


petitioning     the     Governor-general     in 
council    or    the    legislative    council    of 
India    to    repeal    the    press    regulation 
passed  in   1823  .  .  .   Calcutta   1835 
HCL 

Bikle,  Henry  Wolf,  1877- 

Jurisdiction  of  the  United  States  over 
seditious  libel.  American  Law  Register 
50:1-26  1902 

Borah,   William    E.,   and   others 

Punishment   of   seditious   acts   and   utter- 
ances. Congressional  Record  56:5025-49 
April  5,  1918 
PAIS   '18 

Bouroff,  B.  A. 

Freedom  of  the  press  in  Russia.  World 
Today  9:768-71    July,    1905 

Carus,  Paul,  1852- 

Nature     of     the     state.     Chicago,     Open 
court  publishing  co.  1894  vii,56p 
LC  Y 

This  book  contains  chapters  on  "The  authority 
of  the  state  and  the  right  to  revolution"  and 
"Treason  and  reform"  in  which  arc  discussed 
principles  applicable  to   free  speech. 

Chandhuri,   J. 

Law  of  sedition  in  India.  Juridical  Re- 
view   10:385-94    1898 

Chandler,   Pelig  Whitman,    1816-1889 

Trial  of  J.  P.  Zcnger  .  .  .  for  two  libels 
on  the  government,  1735.  (In  his:  Amer- 
ican criminal  trials.  Boston  1841-1849 
1:151-209) 

Y 

Also   reported  in:   Howell's   State  Trials. 

Charpentier,  Armand 

Censure  sous  Napoleon  III.  Nouvclle 
Revue    35:17-29    1905 

NY 

Christophilus,  pseud. 

Vindiciae  Brittannicae:  Christianity  inter- 
ested in  the  dismissal  of  ministers;  a 
vindication  of  the  people  from  the 
charge  of  blasphemy,  and  a  defence  of 
the  freedom  of  the  press.  2d  ed  altered 
and  corrected  (Pamphlets.  vl9)  Lon- 
don   1822   161-99,369-429p 

General  discussion  of  blasphemy   and  sedition. 

—Same.   London,    Printed   for   \V.    Simpkin 

&  R.   Marshal   1821   v-xll.l80p 
TS 

Claghome,  Kate  Holladay 

Alien   and   sedition   bills   up-to-date.   Sur- 
vey 42:590-2  July  19,  1919 
TS 

An  account  of  pending  bills. 


172 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Cobb,   Frank   I. 

What  the  United  States  needs,  restora- 
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La  Follette's  Magazine  12:9-10  Jan, 
1920 
TS 

Argues    for    tolerance    toward   open    revolution- 
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Cobbett,  William,  1762-1835 

Full  and  accurate  report  of  the  trial  of 
W.  Cobbett  .  .  .  July  17,  1831,  in  the 
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NY  Y 

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1779-1854 
An  examination  of  the  trials  for  sedition 
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LC  Y 

Conducting  a  Russian  newspaper.  World's 
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Pamphleteer   (London)   6:205-38  1815 

Constitutional  association  for  opposing  the 
progress  of  disloyal  and  seditious  prin- 
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NY 

Cottu,   [Charles]   b.   1777? 

Considerations  sur  la  mise  en  accusation 

des  ministres.  2d   ed   Paris,   A.   Dupont 

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NY  Y 

Crandall,  Reuben 

Trial  of  Reuben  Crandall,  M.  D.,  charged 
with  publishing  seditious  libels,  by  cir- 
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Circuit  court  for  the  District  of  Col- 
umbia, held  at  Washington,  in  April, 
1836,  occupying  the  court  the  period  of 
ten  days.  New  York,  H.  R.  Percy  1836 
62p 

TS 

Trial  of  Reuben  Crandall,  charged  with 
publishing  and  circulating  seditious  and 
incendiary  papers,  etc.,  in  the  District 
of  Columbia,  with  the  intent  of  exciting 
servile  insurrection;  carefully  reported 
and  compiled  from  the  written  state- 
ments of  the  court  and  council;  by  a 
member  of  the  bar.  Washington, 
Printed  for  the  proprietors  1836  48p 
NY  TS 


Cremieux,  Albert 

...    La    censure    en    1820   et    1821;    etude 
sur  la  presse  politique  et  la  resistance 
liberale.    Paris,    £.    Comely   &   cie    1912 
195p 
LC  HCL 

Criminal  libel  and  freedom  of  the  press; 
the  decision  in  the  Panama  libel  case. 
Outlook  94:275  Feb  5.  1910 

Czygan,  Paxil 

tJber  die  franzosische  zensur  wiihrend  der 
okkupation  von  Berlin  und  ihren  leiter, 
den  Prediger  Hauchecorne,  in  den 
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Brandenburgischen  und  Preussischen 
geschichte  21:99-137  1908 
Y 

Dacosta,   John 

Remarks  on  the  vernacular  press  law  of 
India;  or.  Act  IX  of  1878.  London,  W. 
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NY 

Daly,  John   Bowles 

Radical   pioneers   of   the   eighteenth   cen- 
tury. London,  S.  Sonnenschein,  Le  Has 
&    Lowrey    1886  xi,252p 
LC  TS 

Chap.  3.  Wilkes  and  liberty;  chap.  5.  Home 
as  a  reformer;  chap.  6,  Liberty  of  the  press;  chap. 
7.  Radicals  in  action;  chap.  8.  Radical  leaders; 
chap.  12.  Government  persecution;  chap.  13. 
English  political  societies;  chap.  14.  Paine  in 
France — close  of  Home's  career. 

Decision  in  the  Panama  libel  case.  Out- 
look 93:357-8   Oct  23,    1909 

Disbarment  for  sedition.  Law  Notes  21:162 

Dec.  1917 
ILP     17 

Erskine,  Thomas  Erskine,  1st  baron,  1750- 
1823 

The    King   v.    Cuthell    [bookseller].    (In: 
Erskine,  Thomas.  Speeches  ...  on  mis- 
cellaneous subjects.  London   1812  p213- 
46) 
NY 

Speeches  of  the  Hon  Thomas  Erskine, 
when  at  the  bar,  on  subjects  connected 
with  the  liberty  of  the  press,  and  against 
constructive  treasons:  collected  by 
James  Ridgway.  London,  J.  Ridgway 
1810  4v 
NY   Y 

Erskine  took  pride  in  prosecuting  publisher 
of  Paine's  "Age  of  reason."  Otherwise  pro- 
moted larger  liberty. 

— Same.  London  1812  v5 
TS  Y 

— Same.    2v    New    York,    Printed    for    East- 
burn,   Kirk  &  CO.    1813 
TS 

Ervin.   C.    W. 

Famous  trials  for  sedition;  first  American 
sedition  case.  Free  Press  May  27,  1911 
TS 


FREE  SPEECH 


173 


Finds  sedition  bills  must  be  modified.  New 

York   Times   59:3   Jan   25,    1920 
TS 

Interviews   many   on    pending   bills. 

Fitzgerald,    Percy    [Hetherington] 

Life  and  times  of  John  Wilkes.  M.P., 
Lord  Mayor  of  London  and  Chamber- 
lain. London,  Ward  &  Douney  1888  2v 

NY  Y 

Ford,  Paul  Leicester 

(ed.)    Journals   of    Hugh    Gaines,   printer. 
New  York.   Dodd.  Mead  &  co.   1902  2v 
Pages    5662    tell    of    censorship    in    American 
colonics. 

Forensic  eloquence:  sketches  of  trials  in 
Ireland  for  high  treason,  etc.,  includ- 
ing the  speeches  of  Mr  Curran  at  length. 
.  .  .  2d  ed  Baltimore,  G.  Douglas  1805 
40,433p 

NY 

Free  Press  persecution;  or,  The  steel  trust 
alarmed;  information  charging  "sedi- 
tious and  criminal  libel"  against  the 
alleged  committee  in  charge  of  the 
Free  Press.  New  Castle,  Pa.,  Free  press 
publishing  co.    [1910]    31p 

TS 

Revival  of  seditious  libel  in  a  case  of  indus- 
trial dispute.  More  of  this  can  be  found  in  writ- 
ings of  T._  Schroeder.  Defendants  were  McCar- 
thy, Flannigan  et  al. 

Freedom  of  opinion  and  the  clergy.  New 
Republic   21:303-5    Feb    11,    1920 

Gitterman,  A. 

Zenger  case.    American   Federationist   16: 
213-15  1909 
Y 

Gompers,  Samuel 

Graham-Rice  sedition  bill  would  manu- 
facture law-breakers.  American  Federa- 
tionist 27:138-9  Feb,  1920 

Great  Britain.  Court  of  Star  chamber 
Decree  of  Star  chamber  concerning  print- 
ing; made  July  11,  1637.  Reprinted  by 
the  Grolier  club,  from  the  first  edition 
by  Robert  Barker,  1637.  [New  York, 
Press  of  T.  L.  De  Vinne  &  co.  1884] 
[83]p 

LC 

Great  Britain.    Foreign  office 

Correspondence    respecting    the    suppres- 
sion of  the  "Bosphore   Egyptien."   Lon- 
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NY  Y 

In  Great  Britain.  Parliament.  Sessional  pa- 
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Greene,  Richard  Wilson 

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Henry  Handwich,  and  William  Brown- 
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TS 


and  to  insult  and  assault  His  Excel- 
lency the  Lord  Lieutenant,  in  the 
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port. Dublin,  Richard  Milliken  1823 
371p 

Deals  with  Orangemen's  protest  against  a  pro- 
Catholic  lord  lieutenant.  Jury  disagreed. 

Hankin,  Edward,    1747-1835 

Letter  to  the  Earl  of  Liverpool  on  the 
licentiousness  of  the  press,  as  destruc- 
tive of  the  monarchy  and  the  public 
morals  .  .  .  London,  White,  Cocrane  & 
CO.    1814  96p 

NY 

Hard.    William 

Perhaps  the  turning  of  the  tide.  New  Re- 
public 21:313-16  F  11,  1920 

A  critical  review  of  the  discussion  of  a  pro- 
posed sedition  law,  before  committee  of  U.S. 
Congress. 

Hardwick,  Thomas  W.,  and  others 

Seditious  acts  and  utterances:  conference 
report.    Congressional    Record    56:6420- 
34  May  2,   1918 
PAIS  '18 

Haynes,  E.  S.  P. 

Taboos  of  the  British  museum  library. 
English    Review   16:123-34   Dec,    1913 

Gives  specific  information  of  library  censor- 
ship and  criticizes  the  same. 

Hearst,  William  Randolph 
Mr   Hearst  thinks  a   fight   against  a   free 
press  is  a  fight  against  the  people.  New 
York  American   Nov   16,   1909 

TS 

Deals  with  imprisonment  of  Carlo  de  Fornaro 
for  libel  against  Mexican  officials.  This  was  revo- 
lutionary   propaganda. 

Henderson,   Gerard  Carl 

What  is  left  of  free  speech?  New  Repub- 
lic  21:50-2   Dec   10,  1919 

How  the  press  may  be  Russianized.  La  Fol- 

lette's   Magazine   1:3-4  March  20,   1909 
TS 

Deals  with  libel  case  over  Panama  canal  scan- 
dal.    See  also   World,   The.   New  York;   Panama 

canal. 

Huddleston,  George 

What  sedition  acts  mean  to  free  speech. 

The    Searchlight    (Wash.    D.C.)    4:20-3 

Jan  31,    1920 
TS 

This  Congressman  seems  to  approve  all  existing 
abridgements  of  free  speech  but  believes  there  is 
no  need  of  increasing  restrictions. 

Hunt.  Frederick  Knight,   1814-1854 

Fourth  estate:  contributions  towards  a 
history  of  newspapers,  and  of  the  lib- 
erty of  the  press.  London,  D.  Bogue 
1850  2v 

B  LC  NY  TS  Y 

Historical  treatment. 

Johnson,  H.  W.,  and  others 

Seditious    acts    and    utterances.    Congres- 
sional   Record    56:6501-23    May   4,    1918 
PAIS  '18 


174 


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"World"  libel.  Central  Law  Journal  68: 
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Correspondence  on  the  prosecution  of  certain 
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Langford,  John  Alfred 

Prison  books  and  their  authors.  London, 
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TS 

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Libeling  a  king.  [United  States  ex  rel  My- 
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ILP  '15 

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TS 

Defendants  ultimately  found  not  guilty  yet 
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of  jury;  .  .  .  jury  acquitted  in  hour  .  .  . 
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TS 

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Story  of  a  proletarian  newspaper,  by  Fred 
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Long  account  of  defendants  and  their  trial 
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In  the  superior  court  of  Pennsylvania, 
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TS 


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Maclean,   Charles,    1788-1824 

Affairs  of  Asia  considered  in  their  ef- 
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NY  Y 

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M'Phun    1831    v-viii,160p 

NY 

Martin,  Harold 

The   Manila   censorship.   Forum   31:462-71 
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May,   Thomas  Erskine 

Constitutional  history  of  England  since 
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Longmans,    Green    &   co.    1912 

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Mill,  James,   1773-1836 

On  the  liberty  of  the  press  for  advocat- 
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TS 

Moffatt,   Cleveland 

W^ays    to    stop    seditious    speeches.    .\ew 

York  Times   Magazine  Au-  26.   1917  p9 
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comtc   de,    1810-1870 

Montalembert  on  constitutional  liberty: 
a  picture  of  England,  painted  by  a 
Frenchman;  being  a  complete  transla- 
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"A    debate    on    India    in    the    English 


FREE  SPEECH 


175 


Parliament,"    which    has    subjected    the  On  the  law  of  libel;  with  strictures  on  the 
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76p  NY 


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Late  state  prosecution  in  France:  trial 
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M  Douniol,  before  the  Paris  Correc- 
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Wilson  1858  24p 
NY 

Muir,  Thomas,  1765-1798 

An  account  of  the  trial  of  Thomas  Muir, 
esq.,  younger  of  Huntershill,  before  the 
High  court  of  justiciary  at  Edinburgh, 
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for  sedition.  3d  .Amer  cd  New  York. 
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NY 

Prosecution  involved  Paine's  "Rights  of  man." 

Myers,  Henry  L. 

Another  assault  on  freedom  of  expression 
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Mylius,  Edward   F, 

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United  States  circuit  court  of  appeals  for 
the  second  circuit.  [The  United  States 
ex  rel  Eduard  F.  Mylius,  appellee  v. 
Byron  H.  Uhl,  Acting  commissioner  of 
immigration.]  Brief  on  behalf  of  ap- 
pellee, n.p.  [1913]  78p 
TS 

Unsuccessful   effort   to    deport   Mylius   on   con- 
viction of  having  libeled  King  George  of  England. 

Mylius  case.  Record  of  [English]  trial  for 
libeling  England's  king.  New  York,  Al- 
lied printing  trades  council  n.d.  [1913] 
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For  conviction  in   England  it  was  proposed   to 
deport  him   from  U.S.   Effort  failed. 
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Nations,   Gilbert  O. 

Myers  would  re-enact  sedition  law.  Men- 
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New   Indian   press  act.   Spectator    100:924-6 

June   13,    1908 
RGS  '07-15 

Nicoll,  De  Lancey 

Panama  libel  case.  [The  United  States 
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error  .  .  .  sued  out  by  the  government 
to  review  a  judgment  quashing  an  in- 
dictment charging  the  publication  .  .  . 
of  alleged  libels  printed  in  the  New 
York  World;  argument  of  D.  Nicoll,  of 
counsel  for  the  defendant  before  the 
Supreme  court.  Washington,  Oct  24, 
1910.  n.p.   [1910]   43p 

NY 


Overman,  Lee  Slater,  1854-,  and  others 
Punishment   of   seditious   acts   and   utter- 
ances.   Congressional    Record    56:4989- 
5002   April  4,    1918 

PAIS   '18 

Punishment   of   seditious   acts   and    utter- 
ances.   Congressional    Record    56  5212- 
40  A.pril  9,   1918 
PAIS  '18 

Punishment   of   seditious   acts   and   utter- 
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310  April    10,    1918 
PAIS   '18 

Paine,    Thomas,    1737-1809 

Letter  addressed  to  the  addressers,  on  tne 
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Printed  for  H.  &  P.  Rice  1793  43p 

B 

—Same.   New  York,  T.   Greenleaf   1793  38p 

Panama  canal  libel  suits.  Independent  66: 
393  Feb  25,   1909 

See:  Criminal  libel  and  freedom  of  the  press. 
Also:  World  (N.Y.)  How  the  press  may  be 
Russianized. 

Panama  libel  case:  United  States  Supreme 
court  decision.  Outlook  97:46-7  Jan  14. 
1911 

RG  '10-14 

Peltier,  Jean  [Gabriel] 

Trial  of  John  Peltier  for  a  libel  against 
Napoleon  Buonaparte  ...  21  of  Feb- 
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Adams  and  the  defense  revised  by  Mr 
Mackintosh.  London,  Cox,  Son  &  Bay- 
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NY 

Perpetual  peril.  Truth  Seeker  47:52  Jan  24. 

1920 
TS 

Discredits  attitude  of  some  U.S.  Senators  and 
contrasts   with   Francesco   Ferrer. 

Poindexter,   Miles,   and   others 

Punishment    of    seditious   acts    and    utter- 
ances. Congressional   Record  56:5143-70 
April   8,    1918 
PAIS  "18 

Seditious  acts  and  utterances:  conference 
report.  Congressional  Record  56:5944-8 
April  24.    1918 
PAIS  '18 

Post.  Louis  F. 

Legal  limitations  upon  the  use  of  lan- 
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TS 

Proben  schleswig-holsteinischer  pressfrei- 
heit;  oder.  Die  deutsche  in  kampfe  rnit 
der  diinischen  prcsse.  Leipzig,  Weid- 
mann'schc  buchhandlung   1843-44  2v 

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TS 

Robbins.    A.    H. 

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Roberts,   William 

Earlier  history  of  English  bookselling". 
London,  S.  Low,  Marston,  Searle  & 
Rivington  1889  341p 

Pages  24  to  30  give  some  account  of  censor- 
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Roosevelt's    law    of    libel.    Nation    90:104-5 

Feb   3,   1910 
Y 

Rutherford,  Livingston 

John  Peter  Zenger,  his  press,  his  trial 
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For  another  report  of  this  famous  trial  see: 
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Savage,  William 

Dictionary  of  the  art  of  printing.  Lon- 
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Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,  1864- 

Declaration  of  independence  in  the  Philip- 
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TS 

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TS 

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Methods  of  constitutional  construction, 
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James  Mill,  J.  L.  DeLolme  and  John 
Cartwright.  New  York,  Free  speech 
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TS 

Revival  of  seditious  libel;  by  a  legal  ex- 
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TS 

Seditious   libel.    [Editorial]    Canadian    Law 

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ILP  '17 


Seditious  libels.  Irish  Law  Times  and  Re- 
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Reprinted  from  The  Brief. 

Seditious  publications  in  the  public  library. 

Scientific   American   Supplement  85:112 

Feb    16,    1918 
RG  '18 

Sherman,  L.  Y.,  and  others 

Seditious    acts    and    utterances.    Congres- 
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Should   the   press   be   censored?    Goodwin's 
Weekly  19:1  Aug  19,  1911 

The  question  is  answered  with  a  hesitating 
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Smith,  John 

Authentic  copy  of  the  minutes  of  evidence 
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in  Demerara;  held  at  the  colony  house, 
in  George  Town,  Demerara,  on  Mon- 
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teresting documents.  London,  Simpkin 
&  Marshall,  &  J.  Nisbet  1824  179p 

TS 

Smith,  Minna  C. 

Italian   republican   prisoners.   Outlook  61: 
919-24   1899 
Y 

Snyder,  William  Lamartine,  1848- 

(ed.)  Great  speeches  by  great  lawyers;  a 
collection  of  arguments  and  speeches 
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lawyers;  with  introductory  notes, 
analyses,  etc.  New  York,  Baker,  Voorhis 
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LC 

Pinkney,  William.  Law  of  constructive 
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— Same.   New   York,   Baker,  Voorhis   &  co. 
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Soderhjelm,  Alma 

Le  regime  de  la  presse  pendant  la  revol- 
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Stockdale,    John,    1749P-1814 

Trial  of  John  Stockdale  for  a  libel  against 
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FREE  SrEECII 


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Kenyon,  in   the   Court  of  king's   bench. 
Richmond,  Printed  by  S.  Pleasants,  ir. 
1804  38p 
LC  NY 

Accusation  based  upon  certain  passages  con- 
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contained  in  a  pamphlet  published  by  Stockdale, 
entitled  "A  review  of  the  principal  charges 
against  Warren  Hastings,  late  governor  general 
of  Bengal". 

Speech  of  Mr  Erskine,  counsel  for  the  defense, 
P5-3S- 

Stockdale,   [John  Joseph] 

Judgment  in  error  in  the  case  of  Stock- 
dale  V.  Hansard,  by  the  Court  of  Com- 
mon Sense.  London,  Longman,  Orme, 
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NY 

Stone,  Melville    Elijah,   1848- 

Removal    of    the    Russian    censorship    on 

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51    1905 
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Treason  on  the  street  corners.  Nation  105: 

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RG  '17 

Two  letters;  the  first  containing  some  re- 
marks on  the  meeting  ...  to  celebrate 
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Tooke,  Thelwall  and  others  .  .  .  the 
second  containing  a  short  comparative 
sketch  of  our  practical  constitution  in 
ancient  times  and  the  present;  with 
some  observations  on  certain  assertions 
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NY 

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Wallace,  M.   G. 

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Linton,  \V.  J.  James  Watson;  a  memoir 
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TS 

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104:351   June  21,   1913 
RG  '10-14 

Woodsworth,  J.   S. 

Bible    a    seditious    and    libelous    book    in 
Canada.   Crucible  3:1-2   March   14,    1920 
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Wooler,   Thomas   J. 

Narrative  of  the  trial  of  T.  J.  Wooler  for 
a  libel  on  His  Majesty's  ministers;  and 
of  Dr  James  Watsun.  Senior,  for  high 
treason.    Glasgow    1817 

World,  The,  New  York 

Roosevelt  Panama  libel  case  against  the 
New  York  World  and  Indianapolis 
News;  decision  of  Hon  Charles  M. 
Hough,  judge  of  the  United  States  court 
for  the  Southern  district  of  New  York, 
and  Hon  Albert  H.  Anderson,  judge  of 
the  U.S.  court  for  the  district  of  In- 
diana; together  with  an  account  of  the 
circumstances  that  led  to  the  unpre- 
cedented prosecutions  on  the  part  of 
the  U.S.  government  and  a  stenographic 
report  of  the  trial  of  the  New  York 
World.  [New  York]  Printed  for  the 
New  York  World   1910  109p 

TS 

Decision    deals   with    place    of    trial    in   case   of 
alleged  seditious  libel. 

Roosevelt  Panama  libel  case  against  The 
New  York  World.  [The  United  States 
V.  The  Press  publishing  co.]  a  brief 
history  of  the  attempt  of  President 
Roosevelt  by  executive  usurpation  to 
destroy  the  freedom  of  the  press  in  the 
United  States,  together  with  the  text 
of  the  unanimous  decision  of  the  Uni- 
ted States  Supreme  court  handed  down 
by  Mr  Chief  Justice  White,  affirming 
the  action  of  Judge  Hough  of  the  Uni- 
ted States  court  in  quashing  the  indict- 
ment. New  York,  Printed  for  the  New 
York  World  1911  88p 
TS 

Worthington,   George 

An  inquiry  into  the  power  of  juries  to 
decide  incidentally  on  questions  of  law. 
Westminster    Review    8:431-75    1827 

NY 

Writers  and  official  censors  under  Eliza- 
beth and  James  I.  Library  ns  8:134-63 
1907 

Yarmolinsky,   A. 

Censorship  in  Russia;  a  historical  studv. 
Russian    Review  3:93-103  July,    1917 

Zenger,   John   Peter,   1680P-1746 

Brief  narrative  of  the  case  and  trial  of 
John  Peter  Zenger,  printer  of  the  New- 
York  Weekly  Journal.  New  Y''ork. 
printed;  Lancaster  re-printed,  and  sold 
by  W.  Dunlap.  at  the  New-printing 
office,   in    Queen-Street   1756  39p 

LC 

—Same,  n.t  p.  [Boston.  J.  Fleet  173S]  48p 

B   NY 

.  .  .  Press,  .  .  .  trial  and  a  bibliography 
of  Zenger  imprints  by  Livingston  Ruth- 
erford; also  a  reprint  of  the  first  edi- 
tion of  the  trial.  New  York,  Dodd,  Mead 
&  CO.  1904  275p 
Trial  of  John  Peter  Zenger,  of  New- 
York,  charged  with  having  printed  and 
published    a    libel    against    the  govern- 


178 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Zenger,  John  Peter  — Continued 

ment.  Added,  the  trial  of  W.  Owen, 
near  Temple-Bar,  also  charged  with 
the  publication  of  a  libel  against  the 
government.  London,  J.  Almon  1765 
59p 

B 

Tryal  of  John  Peter  Zenger,  of  New- 
York,  who  was  lately  try'd  and  acquit- 
ted for  printing  and  publishing  a  libel 
against     the      government;     with     the 


pleadings  and  arguments  on  both  sides. 
4th  ed  London,  J.  Wilford  1738  32p 
B  NY 

The    trial    is    also    reported    in    Howell's    State 
trials   17:675-764. 

Zimmermann,   F.    W.    Rudolph 

Parlamentarische  redcfreiheit  und  der 
schutz  drittcr  gegcn  den  missbrauch 
dersclbcn.  Zeitschrift  fiir  die  Gesamte 
Staatswisscnschaft  63:392-453   1907 


Part  VIII.     Sex  Motive 


General 

Ackerly,  Will  W. 

Constitutional   freedom  of  speech  and  of 
the  press.  Case  and  Comment  22:457-60 
Nov,   1915 
TS  ...... 

Quite    elaborate    review    of    judicial    decisions. 
See:  Morton,  James  F.  in  same  issue. 
Another  victim.  Woodhull  &  Claflin's  Week- 
ly  11:5   Dec  25.   1875 

Arrest  of  John  A.  Lant.  Promises  that  next 
issue  will  contain  a  full  review.  Next  issue  not 
accessible. 

Anthony  Comstock.  (In:  Lum  Smith  the 
Philadelphia  crank  and  notorious  swind- 
ler of  advertisers.  p21  Bufifalo,  N.Y. 
World's  dispensary  printing  office  n.d.) 

TS 

Smith,  an  eccentric,  was  once  convicted  of 
libeling  our  chief  sex-censor.  This  pamphlet  ex- 
poses Smith  and  mentions  conviction  of  Dr  Foote 
on  pi7. 

Auerbach,    Joseph    Smith 

Authorship  and  liberty;  argument  before 
the  Appellate  division  of  the  Supreme 
court  (first  department),  in  the  sup- 
pression of  the  Genius,  by  Theodore 
Dreiser.  North  .\merican  Review  207: 
902-17  June,   1918 

RG  '18 

Baginski,    Max 

Anthony  B.  Comstock's  adventures. 
Mother    Earth    1:27-9   Sept,    1906 

TS 

Ridicules     Comstock     and    his    sex     censorship. 

Barry,  William   Francis,    1849- 

Literature;    the    word    of    life    or    death. 

London,    Casscll    &   co.   ltd.    1912   71p 
LC 
Bell.  W.  S. 

Liberty  and  morality;  a  speech  by  W.  S. 

Bell    at    the    New    York    Free    thinkers 

convention  at  Watkins.  August  26,  1882. 

Boston,  W.   S.  Bell   1882  36p 
TS 

Pages   i6-iq  oppose  sox-ccnsorship. 

Bennett,  De  Robique  Mortimer,  1818-18<S2 
Anthony  Comstock,  his  career  of  cruelty 
and  crime;  a  chapter  from  the  Cham- 
pions of  the  church.  New  York.  The 
author  1878  11  Op 

NY  TS 

Gives  account  of  scx-ccnsorship.  An  earlier 
edition  omits  27  pages  of  concluding  remarks. 


World's  sages,  infidels,  and  thinkers;  be- 
ing biographical  sketches  of  leading 
philosophers,  teachers,  reformers,  inno- 
vators, founders  of  new  schools  of 
thought,  eminent  scientists,  etc.  New 
York,  The  author  1876  1048p 
TS 

Gives  short  biographies  of  many  who  were 
punished  as   heretics   in   theology  or   sex   morals. 

Big  fight  on  to  bar  fights,  races  and  news 
of  them;  measures  forbid  events,  the 
showing  of  pictures  and  printing  of  re- 
ports or  odds;  say  committee  favors  it; 
special  rule  necessary  to  get  vote  at 
this  session  some  opposition.  Chicago 
Sunday   Examiner  Feb   19,    1911 

TS 

Discusses  efforts  to  extend  sex  censorship  into 
related    "moral"   fields. 

Broun,  Heywood 

Where    docs    censorship    start?     Collier's 
67:14-15  May  14,   1921 
Bnmner,  Julius  C. 

"Unzijchtige"       sch'riftwerke.      .Augsburg, 
Augsburgcr   buchdruckerei   und   verlag- 
sanstalt,  1914  50p 
TS 

Sex-censorship   in   Germany. 

Buchanan,   Robert   Williams,    1841-1901 
Fleshly   school  of  poetry  and   other  phe- 
nomena   of    the    day.    London.    Strahan 
&   CO.    1872   ix.97p 

B  Y 

On  descending  into  hell;  a  letter  ad- 
dressed to  the  Right  Hon  Henry  Mat- 
thews, home  secretary,  concerning  the 
proposed  suppression  of  literature. 
London.   G.   Redway   1889  38p 

LC  TS 

Partly  reprinted  in  Physical  Culture  18:266-8, 
October,  igo7,  under  title:  Freedom  in  literature. 
Opposes  sex-censorship. 

Buss.  Berk  C.  E. 

Tn    defence    of    "Ileloisc."    Adult    2:327-9 
Dec.    1898 
TS 

Ileloisc.  a  long  poem  by  Bertha  C.  E.  Buss 
and  runiniLr  through  Adult  was  denounced  as 
"obscene"    and    this    is    a   self-justification. 

Chamberlain,   Edward   W. 

In    the    midst    of    wolves,    .\rcna    10:835-7 
Nov.  1894 
TS 

T)e.-iU  with  "obscenity"  cases  of  Moses  Hmr- 
nian   and  Lois  Waisbrooker. 


FREE  SPEECH 


179 


Collier,  John 

Anthony    Comstock — liberal.    Survey    35: 
127-30  Nov  6.  1915 
TS 

A  post-mortem  appreciation  of  the  chief  spy 
of  our  sex-censorship. 

Lantern  bearers;  censorship  and  the  Na- 
tional board.  Survey  35:9-14  Oct  2.  1915 
RG   '15 

Comstock,  Anthony,  1844-1915 

Combatting    the    moral    cancer    planters. 
The  Light,  tenth  year,  no.  53:58-63  Jan. 
1907 
TS 

In  defense  of  sex-censorship,  by  our  Chief 
"smut  hound." 

Traps  for  the  young;  with  an  introduction 
by  J.   M.   Buckley.  New  York,   Funk  & 
Wagnalls  1883  xii,[7]-253p 
B    LC    NY 

Postal  censorship,  sex,  fraud,  lotteries. 

—Same.   3d   ed    New   York,   Funk   &    Wag- 
nalls 1884  xii,f7]-253p 
TS 

The  work  of  the  New  York  Society  for 
the  prevention  of  vice,  and  its  bearings 
on  the  morals  of  the  voung.  Pedagog- 
ical   Seminary    16:403-20    Sept,    1920 

Comstockism  with  its  ignorant  censorship 
of  the  press  exposed;  fable  of  the  spider 
and  the  bees,  verified  by  facts,  and  press 
and  pulpit  comments  which  should  com- 
mand the  serious  attention  of  every 
American  citizen.  New  York,  National 
defence   association    1881    62p 

TS 

Conway,  Moncure  Daniel,  1832-1907 

Liberty  and  morality;  a  discourse  given 
at  South  Place  Chapel,  Finsbury.  Lon- 
don. Freethought  publishing  co.  1878 
I5p 

TS 

Able   criticism   of   sex-censorship. 
— Same.     (Trutli     Seeker     tracts,     no.     153) 

lip 
Corbin,  John 

Tyranny  of  police  and  press.  (In:  Shaw. 
B.,  and  Corbin,  J.  Author's  apology. 
p5-19  New  York.   Brentano's   1915  66p) 

Reprinted  from  N.Y.  Sun,  Nov.  5,  1905.  Gives 
and  criticizes  police  commissioner's  excuse  for 
suppression,  including  "besmirches  sacrcdness  of 
a   clergyman's   calling." 

Crawford.  Mabel   Sharman 

Registry  oftkes.  (.National  vigilance  as- 
sociation for  the  repres.'^ion  of  vice  and 
public  immoralitv.  Publications,  no.  2) 
London   1886  6p  " 

B 

Criminal  law,  New  York  penal  law  section 
43,  obscene  utterances.  [People  v.  Tyl- 
kofF,  New  York  Reports,  Court  of  .Ap- 
peals 212:197]  Columbia  Law  Review 
15:454    Mav,   1915 

TLP  -15 

Crusade  against  free  speech  fand]  Presi- 
dential  despotism.   Public    11:40-5(1   1Q(\S 


Cushing,  Marshall  Henry,   1860- 
Story    of    our    post    office;    the    greatest 
government    department    in    all    of    its 
phases.    Boston,    A.    M.    Thayer    &    co. 
1893   1034p 

LC  NY  TS 

Sex-censorship.  P609-12;  anti-lottery  censor- 
ship PS35,  538,  S40-I,  546;  frauds,  P503,  567-78, 
etc. 

D'Auvergne,    Edmund    B. 

Case  for  the  anti-puritan.  New  Weekly 
[England]    2:42  June  27,   1914 

Democritus,  pseud. 

Corrupting   the    morals    of    her    majesty's 
subjects.    University    Magazine    10:443-7 
1898 
NY 

Discussing  the  social  evil;  decision  of  some 
Chicago  post  office  censors.  Nation  93: 
308-9  Oct  5.  1911 

RG  '10-14 

Doty,  Elias,  1841- 

Doty's  commentaries  on  the  moot  courts 

of   Iowa.    [Cedar  Rapids,   la.,   E.   Doty? 

1903?]   155p 
LC 

Dreiser,   Theodore 

Life,  art  and  liberty.  Seven  Arts  Feb,  1917 
D363-89 

Abstract  of  in:  Current  Opinion  62:344-5,  May 
1917. 

England's    censorship    mania.    Literary    Di- 
gest  44:483-4    March  9,    1912 
RG  '10-14 

Exclusion  of  certain  publications  from  the 
mails;  hearings  before  the  committee 
on  the  post  office  and  port  roads,  of 
the  House  of  representatives.  Sixty- 
third  congress,  third  session  on  H.R. 
20644  and  H.R.  21183,  bills  to  exclude 
certain  publications  from  the  mails. 
Washington,  Government  printing  office 
1915  23p 

TS 

Futile  attempt  to  make  postal  censorship  in- 
clude libelous  matter  and  to  deny  all  use  of  the 
mails   to  those  circulating  prohibited  publications. 

Famous  through  persecution.  Hall's  Jour- 
nal of  Health  23:496  Dec,  1876 

TS 

Comments  on  conviction  of  Dr  E.  B.  Footc.  sr. 
See:  Bl.itchford  Circuit  Court  Reports  i3:4»8; 
Federal  Case,    151^8. 

Foerster,   F.   W. 

Religion  and  sexual  education.   Homiletic 
Review  65:323-7  April.   |013 
.\M1   '13 

Foote.  Edward  Bliss,   1829-1906 

In  the  matter  of  the  repeal  or  modifica- 
lion  of  a  certain  postal  law.  [.\ddress 
hv  Dr  E.  B.  Foote  to  the  Committees 
on  revision  of  laws  in  Senate  and 
House  of  Representatives]  New  York. 
K.  B.  Foote  7p 

TS 

.\ttacks   po-'-il    i-.iiNnrchip. 


180 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


v/ 


Foote,  Edward  Bliss— Contiiiued 

Plea    for    liberty    to    apply    sexology    v. 
sexual  chaos.  Dr  Foote's  Health  Month- 
ly  19:2-11   Feb,    1894 
TS 

Revival    of    a    bad    bill    in    Congress.    Dr 
Foote's  Health  Monthly  19:12  Feb,  1894 
TS 
Foote,    Edward    Bond,   jr.,    1854-1912 

Free  speech  league  presents  this  record 
of  Mr  Theodore  Schroedcr's  writings 
in  evidence  that  considerable  work  has 
been  done.  Broadside  [1906?] 
Plea  for  necessity  of  a  free  medical  press. 
Eclectic  Review  8:171-4  Julv,  1905 
TS 

Opposes  sex-censorship. 

Foster,  J.   Herbert 

Mr   Schroeder's   vain   contentions.   Sexual 
Life  no.  68  Nov,  1911 
TS 

Further  abstract  of  Schroeder,   T. :   "Obscene" 
literature  and  constitutional   law. 
Necessities  of  censorship  and  of  free  in- 
quiry. Sexual  Life  no.  35  Feb,   1909 
TS 

Argues  that  the  motive  of  the  author  and  the 
character  of  the  readers  should  be  criteria  of 
guilt. 

Fowlds,   George,  jr. 

Postal   censorship.    (Leaflet)    Republished 
from  Eden   Gazette,  Oct,  1917 

France.  Ministere  des  affaires  etrangeres 
.  .  .  Documents  diplomatiques.  Conference 
internationale  relative  a  la  repression 
de  la  circulation  des  publications  ob- 
scenes  (18  avril-4  mai  1910)  Paris,  Im- 
primerie   nationale   1910   148p 

LC  NY 

Free  speech  anarchist.  Secular  Thought  23: 
310-13  Sept,  1907 

Criticism  of  Theodore   Schroeder's  advocacy  of 
freedom  for  sex  discussion. 
Free  speech  and  a  free  press;  Everybody's 
editor    favors    censorship.    Toronto    In- 
vestigator  1:8  Nov   11,   1911 
TS 

This  is  part  of  the  discussion  between  Lincoln 
Steffens   and  Erman  J.   Ridgway. 

Free    speech    league;    its    declaration,    n.p., 
n.d.  4p 

TS 

In  part  consists  of  speech  by  Moncure  D.  Con- 
way. Deals  with  Free  speech  league  before  in- 
corporation. 

[Goldman,  Emma] 

[Poor   dear    Anthony    has    passed   awav.] 

[Editorial]   Mother  Earth  10:260-1  Oct, 

1915 
TS 

On  death  of  Anthony  Comstock;  commends  his 
work  for  having  made  plain  that  "sexual  pleasure 
is  rendered  doubly  enticing  by  a  dash  of  inde- 
cency." 

Great  Britain.    Home   department 

Correspondence  respecting  the  interna- 
tional conferences  on  obscene  literature 
and  the  "white  slave  traffic,"  held  in 
Paris.  April  and  May,  1910  .  .  .  London, 
Pub.  by  H.!\I.  Stationery  office,  printed 
bv  Darling  &  son,  ltd.  1912  45p 
LC 


Great  Britain.  Parliament.  Joint  select  com- 
mittee on  lotteries  and  indecent  adver- 
tisements 

Report;  together  with  the  proceedings  of 
the  committee,  minutes  of  evidence, 
and  appendices.  Ordered  by  the  House 
of  commons,  to  be  printed,  29th  July, 
1908.  London,  Printed  for  H.M.  Sta- 
tionery office,  by  Vacher  &  Sons  1908 
xviii,120p 
LC  NY  Y 

Harding,  T.   Swan 

Conventional    virtue's    devious   path.      Open 
Court  34:371-81  June,   1920 
TS 

H[arman,   Moses],   1830-1916 

Equality  before  the  law.  Lucifer  the  Light 
Bearer    March    30,    1888 
TS 

Among  other  matters  discusses  cases  of  George 
Francis  Train,    D.   M.    Bennett,   Knoedler  &  Co. 

Harris,   Frank 

Mr  Sumner  under  the  microscope.  Pear- 
son's Magazine  38:79  Aug,  1917 

Deals  with  Sumner's  management  of  the  fi- 
nances of  the  New  York  society  for  the  preven- 
tion of  vice,  and  his  conduct  as  censor. 

Mortal  disease — the  censorship.  Pearson's 
Magazine  38:367-8   (no.  8) 

Sumner  and  his  vice.  Pearson's  Magazine 
38:130   (no.  3) 

Sumner  and  indecency.  Pearson's  Maga- 
zine  37:556-8    (no.   6) 

Harvey,    Alexander 

The   Bang.  v9  no  24,   March  6,  1916 

The  whole  issue  is  devoted  to  ridiculing  the 
judicial   tests   of  obscenity. 

Hatzipetros,   Nicolaus 

Begrifif  der  unziichtigen  schrift  und  ihrer 
verbreitung.    Berlin,   H.   Bahr    1896  51p 

LC  NY 

Henderson,  David  B. 

52d    Congress,    1st   session.    H.R.    120.    In       / 
the    House   of  representatives,   January  \  / 
5,  1892.   [Bill  to  enlarge  postal  censor- 
ship  over  "obscenity,"  report  of  crime, 
etc.] 

Herzog,  Alfred  W. 

Psychoanalyst  of  judges.  Medico-Legal 
Journal  34:       (no.   7) 

Review  of  argument  of  T.  Schroeder  in  the 
Mockus  blasphemy  case,  later  published  as  Con- 
stitutional  free  speech   defined  and  defended. 

Homans,  T.  S. 

Comstockerv   and    sex   morality.    Altruria 
2:12-13   March,   1911 
TS 

Opposes   sex-censorship. 

Hurt.  Walter 

Comstockism  is  indicted;  infamous  law, 
framed  solely  to  serve  the  ends  of  in- 
justice, now  being  used  by  the  Romish 
oppressor   to   destroy   the   jMenace   and 


FREE  SPEECH 


181 


TS 


imorison  its  staff — Comstock's  alliance 
with  Catholicism  is  demonstrated  be- 
yond all  doubt.  Menace  Oct  9,  1915  no. 
233 


Vigorous  attack  on  obscenity  laws  and  some 
account  of  Hurt's  arrest  in  i8gq.  Present  article 
inspired  by  arrest  of  Menace  editors  for  obscen- 
ity  in  attacking   "political   romanism." 

Despotism.  Assayer  June,   1899  p9 
TS 

Hurt  was  arrested  for  alleged  "obsenity"  in  his 
periodical  the  Gattling  Gun.  The  real  motive  is 
said  to  have  been  to  get  even  because  he  printed 
some  inside  facts  about  certain  shady  epochs  in 
the  career  of  Senator  Hanna  and  his  political 
friends. 

Impurity,    vulgarity,    obscenity.     Woodhull 

&  Claflin's  Weekly  Oct  23,  1875 
TS 

A  long  editorial:  vulgarity  and  obscenity  then 
is  not  of  the  body  but  it  is  in  the  mind  and 
thoughts  of  those  who  make  complaint  about  it. 

In  the  great  exposition  at  Pittsburgh. 
Woodhull  &  Claflin's  Weekly  10:3  Nov 
13,    1875 

"In  the  interests  of  virtuous  tastes"  the  au- 
thorities  draped  "a  stuffed  gorilla". 

Incompatibility  of  theater-going  and  dan- 
cinpr  with  membership  in  the  Christian 
church.  Philadelphia,  Leighton  1872  31p 

B 

Is  there  a  public?  Nation  97:205  Sept  4. 
1913 

RG  '10-14 

Isle   of   Man.    Statutes 

Bill  to  make  provision  for  the  suppres- 
sion of  obscene  publications  and  in- 
decent advertisements,  n.t.p.,  n.p.  6p 

NY 

James,  C.  L. 

Appeal  to  the  women  of  America  in  be- 
half of  liberty  and  justice  to  and  for 
the  prosecuted  and  persecuted  defenders 
of  the  wives  and  inothers  of  our  land. 
Topcka,  Moses  Harman  1891  12p 
TS 

Deals  with  persecution  of  Moses  Harman  for 
"obscenity,"  and  other  scxreformcrs. 

Kearney,  Patrick 

Taboos:    of    the   vice   agents.    Freeman    1 : 
542-43  Aug  18.  1920 
TS 

Criticises  various  acts  of  sex  censorship,  in- 
cluding suppression  of  Freud's  Leonardo  da 
Vinci. 

fKnowles,    Freeman] 

From  the  I'rce  speech  league.  Lantirn  4: 
fll    July  2.    1918 
TS 

Comment  from  varioii=  v,,,,,-,  ..^  ;.i  .  .IJtnr 
Knowlcs'  conviction. 

Konda,   Martin 

In  the  United  States  circuit  C'Mirt  of 
appeals  for  the  seventh  circuit.  October 
term  ...  1906;  no.  1411.  [Martin  K. 
Konda.  plaintiff  in  error,  v.  I'nitcd 
States  of  America,  defendant  in  error.] 
Brief  and  argument,  John  F.  Ceetintr 
attorney  for  plaintiff  in  error.  Chicago. 
Til.,  Bernard  &  Miller  n.d.  38p 
TS 


Transcript  of  record.  In  the  United  States 
circuit  court  of  appeals  for  the  seventh 
circuit,    October    term,    .  .  .     1906    .  .  . 
n.p.,   n.d.   56p 
TS 

For  decision  sec:  Federal  Reporter  166:91; 
Circuit    Court   of    Appeals    Reports   92:75 

[Larkin,  James  E.  et  al] 

To  the   liberal  public.    [Broadside]    2p 
TS 

Deals  with  arrest  of  Charles  L.  Govan,  James 
W.  Adams,  and  James  E.  Larkin,  for  alleged  ob- 
scenity. Acquited.  Defendants  were  members  of 
the .  Home    Colony    of    anarchists    in    Washington. 

Lavollee,  Rene,  1842- 

Fleaux  nationau.x;  depopulation,  porno- 
graphic, alcoolisme,  affaissement  moral. 
Paris.   Alcan   1909  306p 

B 

Le  congros  d'Arlon  (20-24  Sept.  1908)  et 
la  campague  contre  la  pornographic  de 
langue  fran<;aisc.  Academic  des  Sciences 
Morales  et  Politiqucs.  Seances  et  Tra- 
vaux   ns   71:364-70    1909 

Y 

Leeds,    Josiah    Woodward 

Common  weal  vs.  the  news-stand.  [Phila- 
delphia  1894]    16p 
LC 

Legal    obscenity    and     sexual     psychology. 

Medico-legal    Journal    25:195-204    Sept, 

1907 
TS 

Lemon,   Courtney 

"I'rec  speech"  in  the  United  States.  New 
York,  Free  speech  league  [1917] 
TS 

General  plea  for  free  speech  in  relation  to  sex, 
and  appreciation  of  work  of  Theodore  Schroeder. 
Repub     from:     Pearson's     Magazine     36:531-9. 
Dec.   1916. 

Lewis,  E.  G. 

"Lese  majeste."  Woman's  National  Week- 
ly   14:2   Aug   19,    1911 

Shows  how  criticism  of  the  postal  officials  in 
periodicals  is  punished  by  departmental  action. 

Lex,  pseud. 

Comstock  laws;  an  infamous  business;  the 
privacy  of  the  mails  violated  with  im- 
punity; the  vilest  outrages  committed 
under  the  cloak  of  religion;  "putting  up 
jobs"  ...  in  order  to  punish  the  of- 
fender .  .  .  Liberal  Age  2:[11  Jan,  1883 

TS  ■  ,         A 

Si-.Trchiii?  criticism  of  r\,-i,ruvi-  mrthoiis  iisrd 
for    sex    censorship. 

Linton.  Eliza  Lynn 

Mrs  Grundy's  kingdom.  I'oruiu  ,<.'J97-7VA 
1890 

Personalizes  our  censorship  in  Mrs  Grundy 
and  makes  a  discrediting  description  of  her. 
Partly   republished  in   Egoist   i  :6  May,   1890. 

Literary    revolt.    Outlook    94:11-12    Jan    1, 

1910 
RG   '10-14 


182 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Lockhart,  Andrew  Francis,  1890- 

Lockhart  case.  Rail  Splitter  3:1-2  March, 
1918 
TS 

In  his  magazine,  Chain  Lightning,  Lockhart 
attacked  "political  romanism"  with  vigor.  This 
is  said  to  supply  real  motive  for  arrest  and  con- 
viction on  an  article  alleged  "obscene." 

United  States  Circuit  court  of  appeals; 
eighth  circuit.  No.  5004.  [Andrew  Fran- 
cis Lockhart,  plaintiff  in  error,  vs.  The 
United  States  of  America,  defendant  in 
error.]  Brief  for  plaintiff  in  error,  n.p. 
[1917]  62p 
TS 

Convicted  for  circulating:  Chain  Lightning, 
Nov.  1916,  as  being  obscene. 

Lodge,  Sir  Oliver  Joseph,  1851- 

Responsibility     of     authors.     Fortnightly 
Review  93:257-67  Feb,   1910 
TS  Y 

Substance  of  an  address  before  Author's  club. 
Library  censorship  over  sex-literature. 

Look  here!  press  censorship!  another  at- 
tempt to  pass  the  infamous  Henderson 
bill  .  .  .  shall  freedom  of  the  press  be 
limited  by  postal  censorship?  Advertis- 
er's  Guide   March,   1894  p3-10 

TS 

Opposes  a  bill  proposing  to  extend  the  postal 
sex   censorship. 

MacDonald,  Eugene  M. 

Colonel  Robert  Ingersoll  as  he  is;  a  com- 
plete refutation  of  his  clerical  eneniies 
malicious  slanders.  New  York,  The 
Truthseeker    co.    1896    lOOp 

TS 

In  part  defends  against  charge  that  Ingersoll 
favored  total  repeal  of  sex-censorship  statutes. 

Mailing  obscene  matter;  from  the  Clarks- 
burg Va.,  News.  Advertiser's  Guide 
Aug,'  1899 

TS 

Inspired   by   arrest   of   Walter   Hurt. 

Melody,  John   Webster 

Why  the   Catholic  church   is  opposed   to 
sex  instruction  in  the  schools.  New  York 
American   Dec  7,    1913 
TS 

Good    presentation     of    Romanist    viewpoint. 

Menace  publishing  company,  and  others 
In  the  District  court  of  the  United 
States;  western  district  of  Missouri, 
southwestern  division,  no.  253  [United 
States,  plaintiff,  vs.  The  Menace  pub- 
lishing company,  a  corporation.  W'llber 
F.  Phelps,  Bruce  M.  Phelps,  Theodore 
C  Walker  and  Marvin  Brown,  defend- 
ants.] Brief  of  defendants  on  motion  to 
quash  and  on  demurrer.  Kansas  City, 
Mo.,  Smith-Grieves   [1913]    2CX)p 

TS 

Indicted  for  issues  of  The  Menace  for  May 
2,  :91a;  May  16,  1914;  Jan.  24.  1914;  July  if, 
1914;  July  2S,  1914:  Aug.  I.  1914;  and  for  the 
book  by  Father  Crowley:  The  Pope,  chief  of 
white  slavers,  high  priest  of  intrigue;  all  alleged 
to  be  "obscene",  court  overruled  the  demurrer, 
but  jury  found  matter  not  obscene  and  acriuitted 
all  defendants. 


On  trial  for  heresy.   Menace  Jan  8,   1916 
TS 

Call  for  support  in  approaching  trial  for  "ob- 
scenity". 

Merriam,   Clinton   Levi,   1824-1900 

Obscene  literature;  speech  of  Hon  Clin- 
ton L.  Merriam,  of  New  York,  in  the 
House  of  Representatives,  March  1, 
1873,  on  the  bill  (S.  no.  1572)  for  the 
suppression  of  trade  in  and  circulation 
of  obscene  literature  and  articles  of 
immoral  use.  Watertown,  N.Y.,  Ingalls, 
Brockway   &   Skinner,   printers    1873   8p 

B   LC  NY 

Montague,  Gilbert  Holland,  1880- 

Censorship  of  motion  pictures  before  the 
Supreme  court.  Survey  34:82-3  April 
24,    1915 

RG    15 

Morton,  James  Ferdinand,  jr.,   1870- 

Origin  and  working  of  the  Comstock 
law.  Birth  Control  Review  3:5-7  May, 
1919 

TS 

Our  foolish  obscenity  laws.  Case  and 
Comment  23:23-7  June,  1916 

TS 

Proposes  an  amendment  liberalizing  our  sex- 
censorship. 

National  defense  association 

Brief  for  argument  for  the  repeal  of  sec- 
tion 3893,  title  XLVI  United  States  re- 
"     vised  status,  n.d.   [1886?]  38p 
TS 

Opposes  postal  sex-censorship. 

National  liberal  league 

Circular  to  the  auxiliary  leagues  for  1878 
and  1879,  containing  address  of  the  pres- 
ident and  directors  .  .  .  New  York,  The 
author   1879  42p 
TS 

Gives  resolutions  and  proceedings  concerning 
postal  censorship  over  "obscenity."  On  this  issue 
the  National  liberal  league  was  finally  disrupted. 

Third  annual  congress;  held  at  Cincinnati, 
Ohio,  September  13  and  14,  1879.   New 
York.   Liberal  and  scientific  publishing 
house  n.d.  1879  115p 
TS 

New  England  watch  and  ward   society 
Annual  report,  [4th] -27th,  for  1881-1882— 
1904-1905.  2v   Boston   1882-1905 
B 

Annual  reports,  numbers  14,  16-17,  20,  23- 
24.   Boston 
NY 

New  York  society  for  the   suppression   of 
vice 
Annual  report,  nos.  1-41  New  York,  The 
society   1875-1914 
TS 

Morals,  not  art  or  literature:  laws  and 
brief.  New  York  society  for  the  sup- 
pression of  vice   1913  68p 

uses 

Ominous   signs  of  the  times.   Outlook   105: 
68-70   Sept   13,    1913 

For   information   see   Schroeder.   T.    "obscene" 
RG  '10-14 


FREE  SPEECH 


183 


Our  censorship  committee.  Scribner's  Mag- 
azine  51:762-3  June.   1912 

RG   '10-14 

Our  shadowy  "obscenity"  laws.  Publisher's 
Weekly  July  8.   1916  p93-100 

TS 

Reprints  in  full  J.  F.  Morton's  "Our  foolish 
obscenity  laws,"  and  J.  S.  Sumner's  "Obscene 
literature,"  from  Case  and  Comment,  with  a 
long  editorial. 

Pareto,  Vilfredo 

Le   mythe  vertuiste   et   la   littcrature   im- 
morale.    Paris,    M.    Riviere    &    cie    1911 
186p 
NY  TS 

Opposes    sex-censorship    with    great   cleverness. 

Passing  of  the  indecent.  Outlook  106:795-6 
April  11,  1914 

RG  '10-14 

Paton,   John   Brown 

Recreative  instruction  of  young  people. 
[London,  National  vigil^ce  associa- 
tion for  the  repression  of  criminal  vice 
and  public  immorality  1886]  7p 

B 

Pernicious  use  of  frankness.  Independent 
75:604-5   Sept   11,   1913 

RG   '10-14 

Poetic  licenses:  a  forecast.  Littel's  Living 
Age  Nov  23,  1889  p509-ll 

TS 

A  humorous  short  one  act  play  founded  on 
supposed  censorship  of  songs.  From  Punch. 
During  great  war  German  songs  were  suppressed 
by  mobs. 

Police  as  literary  censors.  Literary  Digest 
44:533-4   March   16,    1912 

RG  '10-14 

Pomeroy,   "Brick" 

Beggarly  lot  of  liberals.  Pomeroy's  Ad- 
vance  Thought   March,   1891 

TS 

Criticises  liberals  for  not  sustaining  Moses 
Ilarman  charged  with   "obscenity." 

Postmaster  generals  order  to  his  post- 
masters. Appeal  to  Reason  no.  653  July 
4.   1908 

TS 

Page  of  discussion  about  use  of  sex  censorship 
to  exclude  the  socialist  papers  from  mails. 

Press  censor.ship;  editorial  from  the  Detroit 
Free  Press.  March  9,  1894.  .Advertiser's 
Guide   April.   1894  p4-8 

TS 

Press  censorship;  revival  of  a  bad  bill  in 
Congress.  Advertiser's  Guide  Feb,  1894 

TS 

Contains  also  other  items  on  the  subject  of 
press  censorship.  Opposes  an  extension  of  our 
postal   censorship   against   "obscenity." 

Press  censorship!  a  revival  of  mediaeval 
animosity  to  the  press,  the  old  Hender- 
son bill  .  .  .  the  liberty  of  unlicensed 
printing  in  danger!  shall  an  inquisition 
be  established  on  American  soil?  .Ad- 
vertiser's   Guide    May,    1894    p4-S 

TS 

Contains  interview  with  congressmen  and  ex- 
tracts from  report  of  congressional  committee  on 
extending  the  power  of  Postmaster  general  over 
the  content  of  the  mails,  by  extending  the  pres- 
ent  sex-censorship. 


Protest.   Record   of   the   Times  8:[1]    April 

1.   1892 
TS 
Purity    law    v.    free    press;    "obscenity"    an 

undefined  crime,  but  generally  involves 

unorthodox   opinion.   Truth    Seeker  43: 

166  March  11.  1916 

Rawson,  A.  L. 

Comstock's   last  case.   Truth   Seeker   Oct 
5.   1878 
TS 

Reid.  Hugh 

What's   the    matter    with    the    post   office. 
Public    22:1041-3 
TS 

Gives  historical  account  of  growth  of  post  office 
censorship  in  the  U.S. 

Rogers,  Lindsay 

.  .  .  Postal  power  of  Congress;  a  study 
in  constitutional  expansion.  Baltimore, 
Johns  Hopkins  press   1916  189p 

"Portions  of  chapters  4  and  7  have  appeared 
as  articles  on  'Federal  interference  with  the 
freedom  of  the  press,'  and  'The  extension  of 
federal  control  thru  the  regulation  of  the  mails,' 
in  the  Vale  Law  Journal  (May,  19 14)  and  the 
Harvard  Law  Review  (November,  19 13)  respect- 
ively."    Preface 

Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,   1864- 

Absurdity  of  the  obscenity  laws.  Physical 
Culture  17:85-8  Jan.  1907 
TS 

At  the  Sunrise  club.  Truth  Seeker  43:388- 
9  June  17,  1916 
TS 

Censoring    free    speech    advocates.     Call 
Magazine  Nov  16,  1919  p3  &  9 
TS 

Censorship     of     sex     literature.     Medical 
Council   14:91-8   March,    1909 
TS 

Concerning    obscene     literature.     Secular 
Thought  33:325-6  Sept,  1907 
TS 

Same  as  I  want  your  advice.  Asks  for  ob- 
jective standards  of  "obscenity". 

Conflict  between  religious  morals  and 
ethical  science,  being  a  study  in  the 
uncertainty  of  the  moral  test  of  crime. 
New  York,  Free  speech  league  1911 
21p 
TS 

Constitution    and    obscenitv    postal    laws. 
Albany  Law  Journal  69:334-9  Nov,  1907 
TS 

Constructive  crimes  defined.  Central  Law 
Journal  67:469-75  Dec  18,  1908 
TS 

Constructive    "obscenity"    an    unconstitu- 
tional crime.   Physical   Culture   17:363-4 
May.  1907 
TS 

"Due  process  of  law"  in  relation  to  statu- 
tory uncertainty  and  constructive  of- 
fences, giving  much  needed  enlighten- 
ment to  legislator;:,  bar  and  bench  .  .  . 
New  York,  Free  speech  league  1908  74p 
TS 


184 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Schroeder,  T.  A.— Continued 

Evolution    of    Comstockery.    Altruria    2: 
13-17   March,   1907 
TS 

Censorship  of  "obscenity." 

Free   press   anthology.    New    York,    Free 
speech   league    and    Truth    Seeker   pub- 
lishing CO.   1909  267p 
TS 

Free   speech   league   to    the    rescue.    Blue 
Grass  Blade  March  17,  1907 
TS 

Relates  to  case  of  Bernarr  Macfadden  arrested 
for    "obscenity"    published   in:    Physical   Culture. 

Freedom  of  the  press  and  "obscene"  lit- 
erature; three  essays.  New  York,  Free 
speech   league    1906  71p 
TS 

I  want  j'our  advice.  American  Journal  of 
Eugenics  1:101-2  Aug,  1907;  Blue  Grass 
Blade    Aug,    1907;    Purity  Journal    and 
Christian   Life   July-Sept,    1907 
TS 

Request  for  statement  of  objective  criteria  of 
"obscenity".      No  response  received. 

In    defense    of    liberty:    Macfadden's    ar- 
rest.   Physical    Culture    17:301-2    April, 
1907 
TS 

Bernarr  Macfadden  was  arrested  and  after- 
ward convicted  for  "obscenity"  alleged  to  reside 
in  a  story  published  in  Physical  Culture  and  en- 
titled: Growing  to  manhood  in  civilized  society; 
written  by  John  R.  Coryell  under  nom  de  plume. 

Judicial    destruction    of    freedom    of    the 
press.    Albany     Law    Journal     70:323-6 
Nov,   1908 
TS 

Judicial  test  of  obscenity  applied.  Alien- 
ist   and     Neurologist    31:497-501     Nov, 
1910 
TS 

Legal    obscenity   and    sexual   psychologj'-. 
Alienist    and    Neurologist   29:1-35    Aug, 

TS  ^^-^^  -  ^  • :  ;*  :tY'"'  ^''-  '^.!i;« '  ^  "^ •  >^  ^'  •' ' "^  ^'' ■  ■  '■' 

THe  editor,  "Clark  Bell,  refused  to  complete  the 
publication  without  editing  it.  Accordingly,  it 
was  withdrawn  and  was  published  in  full  in; 
Alienist  and  Neurologist  29:1-35  Aug.   1908. 

Liberty  of  speech  and  press  essential  to 
purity  propaganda;  an  address  prepared 
for  the  National  purity  conference  and 
to  be  delivered  Oct  10th,  1906  .  .  . 
[New  York,  Free  speech  league  19061 
27-50p 
TS 

Liberty  of   the   press   essential    to   purity 
propaganda.    Light    10:64-80    Jan.    1907 
TS 

Moral    sentimentalizing.     Pacific    Medical 
Journal  50:704-10  Nov,   1907 
TS 

Much  needed   defense  for  liberty  of  con- 
science,  speech   and  press,   with   special 
application  to  sex  discussion.  New  York, 
Free  speech  league   1906  23p 
TS 


On      the      implied      power      to      exclude 
"obscene"    ideas    from    the    mails.    Cen- 
tral   Law   Journal   65:177-83    Sept,    1907 
TS 

On  the  liberty  of  conscience,  speech  and 
press.    Liberal    Review    3:333-41,    418-30 
Aug,  Sept,  1906 
TS 

Opposition  to  freedom  of  the  press.  Amer- 
ican   Journal    of    Eugenics    1:1-6    July, 
1907 
TS 

Our    prudish    censorship    unveiled.    New 
York,  Free  speech  league  1915 

Psychic    lasciviousness    and    purity    legis- 
lation.   Critic    and    Guide    7:109-11    Oct, 
1907 
TS 

Psychologic     study    of    judicial    opinion. 
New    York,    Privately    printed    for    the 
friends  of  free  speech  1917  i.e.  1918  45p 
TS 

Also  in  California  Law  Review  (Berkeley)  6: 
89-113    Jan,     1918. 

Psychologic    studv    of    modesty.    Medical 
Council    14:18-22  Jan,    1909 
TS 

Reviews  and  [table  of]  contents  of  "Ob- 
scene" literature  and  constitutional 
law,  a  forensic  defense  of  freedom  of 
the  press.  New  York,  Privately  printed 
for  forensic  uses  1911  16p 
TS 

Right   of   free   speech;   a   peppery   corres- 
pondence  [with  the  editor  of  the  Out- 
look.] Truth  Seeker  36:34-5  Jan  16,  1909 
TS 

Rights  of  Moses  Harman  under  the  con- 
stitution; how  they  were  denied.  Amer- 
ican Journal  of  Eugenics  3:13-15  April, 
1910 
TS 

Harman  was  several  times  convicted  of  "ob- 
scenity" for  advocating  sex-reforms. 

Saunders  from  Elizabeth  City,  N.C.,  a  pen 
portrait   of   the   publisher   of   Saundcr's 
Weekly.  Saunder's  Weekly   1:3  May  6, 
1916 
TS 

Saunders  had  come  into  frequent  conflict  with 
censorship  laws,  and  soon  this  new  paper  of  his 
was  suppressed  also. 

Table    of    cases    involving   obscenity   and 
kindred  statutes.  New  York,  Free  speech 
league    1911   24p 
TS 

Test  case  on  obscenity;  statement  of  con- 
tentions,   or    why    the    obscenity    laws 
should   be   annulled.    Blue    Grass    Blade 
March,  1907 
TS 

Stimulated  by  Bernarr  Macfadden's  arrest  for 
"obscenity." 

Varieties  in  criteria  of  guilt  in  obscenity 
cases.     Central     Law    Journal    71:150-6 
Sept  2,  1910 
TS 


FREE  SPEECH 


185 


Varieties    of    oflFicial    modesty.    American 
Journal     of     Eugenics     1:229-308     Dec. 
1907 
TS 

Vice  society  under  fire.  Truth  Seeker  43: 
277  April  29,  1916 
TS 

Reports  debate  before  Sunrise  Club  between 
.'>chroeder  and  John  S.  Summer,  Secretary  of 
N.  Y.  Soc.  for  Sup.  of  Vice. 

What  i.s   criminally  "obscene."   XV   Con- 
gres    international    de    medecine    (Lis- 
bonne,  Avril,   1906)   section  XVI — med. 
legale    separata.    18p 
TS 

Why  do  purists  object  to  sex-discussion? 
American  Journal  of  ICugenics  1:118-23 
Sept,  1907 
TS 

Why  "Obscene"  literature  and  constitu- 
tional law,  a  forensic  defense  of  free- 
dom of  the  press,  is  not  sold  to  you. 
[New  York!  Privately  printed  for  for- 
ensic uses  1911  8p 
TS 

Why  the  "obscenity"  laws  should  be  an- 
nulled.  Physical  Culture   18:169-70  Sept. 
1907 
TS 

— and  Ellis,  Havelock 

Witchcraft   and   obscenity;   twin   supersti- 
tions.   New    York,    Free    speech    league 
1912  16p 
TS 

Schultze,  Ernst,  1874- 

Die  schundliteratur:  ihr  wescn.  ihrc  fol- 
gen,  ihre  bekiimpfung.  ffalle,  Verlag 
der  buchhandlung  des  Waisenhauses 
1911    172p 

Y 

Sercombe,    Parker    H. 

Free  speech?  Not  yet — not  j^et.  Physical 
Culture    18:48  July,   1907 

Deals  with  "obscenity".  Also  the  mobbing  of 
negro  editor  of  Voice  of  the   Negro. 

Seymour,  D.  C. 

Obscenity.     World's     Reformer    and     the 
People  s    Friend,    Newport,    Me.   285 
TS 

Criticism  of  sex  censorship  reproduced  from: 
Lucifer. 

Should  moving   pictures  be  censored.    Cur- 
rent Opinion  70:652-5  May.  1921 

Shufeldt,  Robert  Wilson,  1850- 

Critique  of  the  trial  of  Ida  C.  Craddock. 
Boston  Investigator  82:4-5  April  5.  1902 
A  review  of  the  trial  in  New  York  City  on  the 
17th  of  March,  100.:.  "History  has  one  more 
record  to  make  of  a  backslide  in  science,  and  a 
distinct  restriction  of  personal  liberty  to  the 
American  citizen.  Vice,  indeed,  won  a  victory, 
and  tyranny  scored  a  brilliant  success." 

Curse  of  taboo.  Pacific  Medical  Journal 
54:277-83    May,    1911 

Discusses  origin,  nature  and  history  of  taboo. 
Sets  forth  claim  that  taboo  is  hindrance  to  prog- 
ress in  science  and  civilization. 


Letters  from  Gotham,  nos.  1-13.  Boston 
Investigator  May  9  to  Aug  29.   1903 

Some  of   these   deal   with   Craddock  case. 

Miss  Craddock  within  her  rights.  Truth 
Seeker  29:170  March   15,    1902 

A  brief  note  commending  social  value  of  Ida 
C.  Craddock's  publications,  for  which  she  had 
been   arrested. 

Nakedness  and  public  morality.  American 
Journal  of  Dermatology  and  Genito- 
Urmary  Diseases  15:596-601  Nov  1911 
.^rjV^'  P^-  Havelock  Ellis'  "Psychology  of 
n-i.  i^  volumes),  and  takes  up  the  effect  o£ 
nakedness  on  public  morals,  and  upon  both  adult 
discus^scd"^-      ^^'^   ""=    ^^''''"'    °f   nakednets    is 

Obscene  literature  and  constitutional  law 

On  the  study  of  the  question  of  sex 
Alienist  and  Neurologist  39:109-17  April! 

^ex^studL^'Ind  /hJ"*'^  "^""P   the   importance   of 

Release  of  Miss  Craddock.  Boston  In- 
vestigator 72:8-9  July  5.    1902 

Lea\"e  "toSdl  c"  Cr.l77  ^^  I.*"^  ^'"^^  Speech 
i-<rat,ut,  to  Ida  L.  Craddock  on  her  release  from 
pr.son.  wuh  the  address  made  by  Dr  R  \V  Sh^ 
feldt  severely  criticising  court.  ' 

Smith,   Lum 

Colgate-Simmons-Comstock-Britton  so- 
cieties abject  cowardice.  Public  Herald 
10th    year    April,    1886 

.  Civcs  some  account  of  Smith's  arrest  for  libel- 
."g  Br.tton.  a  detective  for  Mr  Comstock's  So 
ciety  for  the  suppression  of  vice.   ^"""^'""^  ^   ^°- 

Comstock  cornered.  He  comes  to  this  citv 
tor   wool   and   gets   shorn    .  .      Agent's 
^^    Herald  9th  year  May,   1885  pl617-19 

SteflFens,   Joseph   Lincoln,    1866- 

Free    speech    v.    censorship.    Evervbodv's 
Magazine   25:796-9    Dec     IQll      ' 
RG  '10-14 

Out  of  the  muck.  Riverside.  Conn..  Hill- 
acre   bookhouse    1Q13 

uses 

Right  of  free  speech.   Everybody's   Mag- 
azine 25:717-20  Nov,   1911 
RG  '10-14 

Sumner,  John  S. 

Comstock  and  Sumner.  Journal  of  Educa- 
tion 82:458-9  Nov   11,   1915 
RGS  '07-15 

Obscene  literature — its  suppression.  Case 
and  Comment  23:16-19  June,  1916 
TS 


186 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Tasmania.    Laws,   statutes,    etc. 

Act  prohibiting  printing  or  sale  of  in- 
decent publications.  Police  magistrates 
are  given  extensive  discretionary 
powers;  prosecutions  must  be  author- 
ized by  attorney-general;  power  is 
given  to  deal  with  objectionable  photo- 
graphs, tilms,  pictures  and  newspapers 
as  well  as  books.  (Passed  Council 
August  Assembly  September  1917) 
PAIS  '18 

Taylor,  Rebecca,  and  Lawton,  A.  M. 

Truth    [a    periodical.]     (St    Paul,    Minn.) 
May  31,   1896  et  seq 
TS 

This  journal  for  over  a  year  was  devoted  to  an 
attack  upon  C.  B.  Gilbert,  superintendent  of 
schools.  The  circulation  of  affidavits  against  his 
sexual  morality  produced  an  arrest,  trial  and 
acquital  of  Taylor  and  Lawton  for  sending  ob- 
scenity through  the  mails.  Truth  is  devoted  al- 
most wholly  to  this  contest  Indictment  came  in 
spite  of  the^fact  that  Post  Office  department  held 
affidavits  mailable. 

Thompson,  Daniel  Greenleaf 

Philosophy  of  fiction  in  literature;  an  es- 
say. New  York  and  London,  Longmans, 
Green  &  co.  1890 

Chapter  13.  Art,  morals  and  science,  PIS3-204. 

To  censor  popular  songs.   Literary   Digest 

46:1181    May   24,    1913 
RG  '10-14 

United  States.  Senate 

In  the  Senate  of  the  United  States;  May 

25,  1892.  (52d  Congress,  1st  sess.  Re- 
port no.  747)  Mr  Mitchell,  from  the 
committee  on  post-ofiices  and  post- 
roads,  .  .  .  Washington,  Government 
printing   office   n.d.  4p 

TS 

[Waisbrooker,  Lois,   and   Penhallow,   Mat- 
tie  D.] 

Our  new  contest.    Discontent  4:1    March 

26.  1902 
TS 

Gives  an  account  of  arrest  for  an  article  "The 
awful  fate  of  a  fallen  woman"  published  in: 
Clothed  in  the  Sun,  (Home,  Wash.)  Dec.  1901. 
Penhallow  was  postmistress  at  Home,  Wash,  and 
arrested  for  forwarding  the  paper. 

Wayland,  J.  A.,  Phifer,  C.  L.,  and  Warren, 
Fred  D. 

In  the  District  court  of  the  United  States, 
district  of  Kansas,  third  division.  [Uni- 
ted States,  plaintiff,  vs.  J.  A.  Wayland, 
C.  L.  Phifer,  and  Fred  D.  Warren,  de- 
fendants.] Brief  of  defendant  Fred  D. 
Warren,  on  demurrer.  Kansas  City, 
Mo.,  Smith-Grieves  typesetting  co., 
printers  n.d.  168p 
TS 

Defendants,  socialists,  exposed  sexual  eccen- 
tricity of  a  warden  at  U.S.  penitentiary.  Dis- 
charged. 

Williams,  T.  W. 

Argument  against  the  Comstock  laws,  n.p., 
n.d.  7p 
TS 


Wilson,  George  E. 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  United 
States,  October  term,  A.  D.  1892. 
[George  E.  Wilson,  plaintiff  in  error, 
vs.  The  United  States,  defendant  in 
error.]  Brief  and  argument  for  plain- 
tiff in  error.  Chicago,  H.  O'Donoghue 
[1892]  43p 
TS 
Wisconsin.  Statutes 

Bill   to   create   section  4S90m,   statutes  of 
1898,    relating    to    obscene    advertising; 
introduced  by  Senator  Brazean.  Type- 
written sheet 
NY 

Woodhull,  Victoria  Claflrn;  Claflin,  Tennie 
C,  and  Blood,  James  H. 
Our     petition.     Woodhull     and     Claflin's 
Weekly   10:5-6  Jan  30,    1875 

Publishes  petition  to  United  States  for  dam- 
ages resulting  from  arrest  for  "obscenity"  of 
testimony  in  the  case  of  Tilton  v.  Beecher,  as 
published  in  issue  of  Nov.  2,  1872.  Also  of  an 
arrest  to  prevent  lecture  on:  The  naked  truth. 
Cases  dismissed. 

Art 

Art  and  morals:  Anthony  Comstock  versus 

the  rest  of  the  city  of  New  York.  New 

York  Evening  Telegram   Nov   17,    1887 

Quotes    many    prominent    artists    and    others, 

against  prosecution  of  the  Knoedler  pictures. 

Art  museum  fight  kept  up;  the  School  pro- 
tective league  hopes  to  arouse  public 
sentiment.  Boston  IMorning  Herald 
Sept    18,    1911 

TS 

Gives  long  account  of  effort  to  exclude  Bos- 
ton's school  children  from  Art  Museum. 

Art  Student's  League  raided  by  Comstock; 
catalogue  studies  intended  to  show 
city's  high  rank  in  painting  respon- 
sible; girl  bookkeeper  held.  New  York 
American   Aug  3,   1906 

TS 

After  issuing  a  new  catalogue  with  offending 
pictures    omitted   case   was    dismissed. 

Berg,  Leo 

Gefesselte   kunst.    Berlin,   Hermann   Wal- 
ther  1901    165p 
NY 

[Blushing   post    office    and    the    fine    arts.] 
[editorial].   Metropolitan   Magazine   39: 
6  March,  1914 
TS 

Gives  an  account  of  how  the  postmaster  of 
New  York  temporarily  suppressed  this  magazine 
for  reproducing  Wood  nymph's  dance,  and  Play- 
fulness, both  by  Paul  Manship. 

Biirgner,   Hans  Heinrich 

Verbotene  plakate.   Das  Plakat  1914  pl5- 
28 
S 

Censored  faun.  Current  Opinion  60:176 
March.    1916 

Reproduces  censored  picture. 

Comstock,  Anthony 

From  Anthony  Comstock.  National  Bap- 
tist March   1,   1888 

Deals  with  and  answers  matter  contained  in: 
Comstock  rebuked. 


FREE  SPEECH 


187 


Morals,  not  art  or  literature;  the  people 
vs.  ;    laws    and    brief.    n.p.,n.d.    53p  • 

TS 

A  brief  by  Comstock,  to  be  used  in  his  cases 

of  "obscenity,"  quoting  extensively  from  judicial 

decisions. 
Comstock      dooms      September      morning; 

orders    it    out   of   art    dealer's    window. 

New   York  Times  May   11,   1913 
TS 

This  censorship  resulted  in  a  most  extraor- 
dinary sale  of  this  picture  and  numerous  carica- 
tures, of  it. 

Comstock  rebuked;  our  art  censors  sad 
Philadelphia  experience;  told  to  hide 
himself;  the  public  prosecutor  and  pre- 
siding judge  throw  his  cases  out  of 
court.  New  York  Evening  Telegram 
Jan  25,   1888 

TS 

Seven  cases  respectively  against  Janentzky  & 
Weber,  John  C.  Ripka,  John  Francis,  Frederick 
C.    Pfeiffer,    Lewis    Kohn    and    Albert    Snyder. 

Comstock's  Christmas  present;  case  against 
Art  Student's  league  bookkeeper  finally- 
dropped 

After  expurgating  catalogue  case. 

Confiscated    picture.    Mother    Earth    1:34-8 

July,  1906 
TS 

Ridicules  Mr  Comstock,  chief  of  the  Moralists 
for  revenue. 

Coryell,  John  R. 

Comstockery.       Mother       Earth       1:30-40 
March.   1906 
TS 

Tells  of  suppression  of  Hans  Markart's  Tri- 
umph  of  Charles  V,  etc. 

Dawson,  Oswald 

Millard    and    Thompson    cases.    Adult    2: 
84-7  April,  1898 
TS 

Tells  of  acquittal  on  Book  for  women,  and 
judicial  condemnation  of  lantern  slides  of  nude 
women   used   in  lecture    "for   ladies   only". 

Drapes  marble  limbs  of  Cupid;  emissary  of 
Purity  society  astonishes  guests  of 
Bellevue-Stratford.  Philadelphia  Inquir- 
er  May,   1911 

TS  ■ 

Tells  of  attempted  censorship  against  "Cupid", 
and   "Delilah,"  W.  W.   Story  sculptor. 

Francesco    Ferrer  and   Anthony   Comstock. 

[Editorial]    Mother  Earth  5:277-8   Nov, 

1910 
TS 

Tell  of  arrest  of  Geo.  Bauer  for  "obscenity" 
of  a  picture  entitled  Montjuich.  This  is  19  X  24 
inches  and  in  centre  has  nude  female  3  inches 
tall   symbolizing  humanity. 

"Greek  slave"  that  used  to  shock  us  now 
seems  harmless;  statue  that  was  called 
an  outrage  to  decency  and  its  arrival 
here  becomes  on  ordinary  item  in  an 
art  sale.  New  York  Times  Nov  13,  1913 

TS 

Tells  of  hostility  to  Hiram  Power's  statue 
when   first  brought  to  this  country. 

Hazeltine,  Charles 

Narcissus  scrap-book;  containing  an  ac- 
count of  the  seizure  of  the  nude  statu- 
ette by  the   city  marshal  of  New  Bed- 


ford, the  trial  of  the  owner,  his  suit 
against  the  marshal,  and  comments  of 
the  press,  with  trial  in  the  superior 
court.  New  Bedford,  Mass.  E.  Anthony 
&  sons  1873  60p 
TS 

Hearst's  Magazine,  February,  March  and 
April,  1916,  arrested  on  account  of 
pictures  and  dismissed  by  judge 

Heywood,  Angela  F.  T. 

Sex-symbolism — the  Attucks  shaft.  (Leaf- 
let literature)    Princeton,   Mass.,   Word 
office 
TS 

Recounts  the  official  censorship  and  modifica- 
tion   made    upon    a    public    statue    (the    Attucks 

shaft)  in  Boston. 

Irish  war  on  immoral  prints.   Literary   Di- 
gest 44:430  March  2,  1912 
RG  '10-14 

Knoedler,  Edward  L. 

Our  art  censor;  Anthony  Comstock  and 
the  harmless  objects  of  his  misguided 
criticism.  What  constitutes  immorality? 
New  York  Evening  Telegram  Nov  16, 
1887 

This  reproduces  pictures  on  which  Knoedler 
galleries  were  raided  but  defendants  acquitted. 
See  also:   Pfeiffer,   George   E. 

Lee,  Frederick  George 

Immodesty  in   art:   an  expostulation  and 
suggestion;    a    letter    to    Sir    Frederick 
Leighton.   4th   ed   London,    G.    Redway 
1887  5-23p 
TS 

Favors  sex-censorship  in  art. 

Macfadden,    Bemarr 

Comstock,  king  of  the  prudes;  after  ap- 
plying to  two  magistrates  without  suc- 
cess, he  manages  to  secure  a  warrant 
for  the  arrest  of  the  editor  of  this  maga- 
zine; the  mental  and  moral  perversion 
of  Comstock  affects  the  entire  coun- 
try; his  distorted  conception  of  the  hu- 
man body  is  that  of  sheer  prudery, 
which  is  the  curse  of  the  present  age. 
Physical  Culture  14:561-3  Dec,  1905 
TS 

Arrested  for  "obscene"  pictures  in  Physical 
Culture  for  Feb,  1004  and  Nov,  1903.  In  the 
latter  it  was  the  cover  design  by  Carl  Victor  that 
offended. 

McKeown,   E.  J. 

Censoring  the  moving  pictures.  Common 
Cause  July,  1913  p8-16 
TS 

A  Catholic  viewpoint  showing  commercial  ad- 
vantage of  censorship  that  was  voluntary. 

Moens,   Herman   M.   Bernelot 

Injustice    to    a    Holland    scholar    by    the 

Department     of     Justice.     Medico-legal 

Journal  37:77-80  Sept,  1920 
TS 

This  is  a  short  but  detailed  account  of  the 
persecution  of  the  author,  his  conviction,  appeal, 
and  final  acquital  on  a  charge  of  "obscenity"  in 
photographic  studies  of  race  mixture,  for  scien- 
tific purposes.  The  fear-psychology  of  the  war, 
induced  groundless  suspicions  that  Moens  was 
a   German  spy. 


188 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Mocns,   H.   M.   B.  —Continued 

Court  of  appeals.  [The  people  of  the 
state  of  New  York,  plaintiffs  and  re- 
spondents, against  August  Muller,  de- 
fendant and  appellant.]  Case  on  appeal. 
New    York,    C.    G.    Burgoyne    1884   48p 

Court  of  appeals.  [The  people  of  the 
state  of  New  York,  plaintiffs  and  re- 
spondents, against  August  Muller,  de- 
fendant and  appellant!  Statement  and 
points  for  appellant.  New  York,  C.  G. 
Burgoyne  1884  14p 
Muller,   August 

As  to  indecency  in  art;  August  Muller 
convicted  of  selling  improper  photo- 
graphs. New  York  Herald  Dec  18,  1883 

The  pictures  involved  were  reproductions  of: 
Asphyxia,  by  Fata;  After  the  bath,  by  Wencker; 
The  Bather,  by  Perrault;  La  Repose  by  Cham- 
bord.  Appelate  court  overruled  conviction.  See 
People  V.   Muller  New  York  Reports  96:408. 

Thi.s  conviction  for  selling  "obscene"  art  was 
reversed  in  New  York  Reporter  96:408-48;  same 
case,  American  Reporter  48:635. 

No  saint,  yet  blush  he  did  at  Brooklyn's 
high  art.  New  York  World  March  12, 
1914 

At  Mr.  Kuelling's  request  the  Vanderveer 
Park  taxpayers'  association  demands  suppressioti 
of  art  works  in  the  Brooklyn  Institute  of  art,  and 
Erasmus  Hall  high  school.  See  also  Evening 
Mail,   New   York,    March    11,    1914- 

Nudity  is  not  indecent,  Berlin  court  de- 
cides, but  when  noted  artist  paints 
stockings  on  an  undraped  female  figure, 
judge,  prosecutor  and  jury  cry  "dis- 
gusting." New  York  World  May  17, 
1914 

Obscene  literature  and  pictures.  .American 
Journal  of  Dermatology  15:442 

Editorial  telling  of  suppression  of  the  issue 
of  the  same  magazine  for  June,  191 1,  on  account 
of  an  illustrated  article  by  Dr  W.  P.  Carr  on 
scrotal  surgery.  Page  424  has  a  review  by  Shu- 
feldt  of  'Obscene'  literature  and  constitutional 
law. 

One  view  of  the  nude;  Anthony  Comstock 
wins  the  famous  Knoedler  art  case; 
two  naughty  pictures;  Justice  Kilbreth 
decides  that  the  dealers  were  technically 
not  morally  guilty.  New  York  Herald 
March  24,  1888 

TS 

See  also  New  York  Star  and  other  New  York 
papers  of  same  date. 

Passing   show.   Agitator   1:1    April    15,    1911 

TS 

Pfeiffer,  George  E.,  and  Knoedler,  Edward 
Police  court,  first  district.  [The  people, 
etc,  on  the  complaint  of  Anthony  Com- 
stock, vs.  George  E.  Tfeiffer  and  Ed- 
ward L.  Knoedler.]  New  York  1888 
17p 

TS 

Mr.  Comstock  raided  the  Knoedler  galleries 
for  alleged  "obscene"  paintings,  which  were  re- 
produced in  outline  drawings,  Nov.  16,  1887,  in 
New  York  Evening  Telegram.  Court  held  pic- 
tures not  "obscene". 
Post  card  dealer  scores  Comstock;  moral 
censor  "confiscates"  stock  which  he  re- 
fuses to  return  after  the  case  is  dis- 
missed. New  York  Call  Oct  9,  1912 
TS 

Dealer's  name  i=  O.  Fulda. 


Prohibited      postcards      and      photographs. 

Broad   Arrow  95:448  Oct   15,    1915 
LC 

Schonheit-prozess.   n.p.,    n.d.    Broadside 
TS 

Tells  of  the  trial  and  acquital  in  Berlin,  of 
Karl  Ludwig  Vanselow  for  the  magazines  Schon- 
heit    and    Geschlecht    und   Gesellschaft. 

Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,   1864- 

Prosccuted  for  "obscenity";   Case  of  the 
Polish    people's    publishing    co.    Truth 
Seeker  38:226  April,   1911 
TS 

Describes  the  "obscenity"  on  which  arrest  was 
made  in  interest  of  Catholicism.  Reproduces  of- 
fending  cartoon. 

Shufeldt,   Robert  Wilson,    1850- 

Comstockery.  New  York  World  47:  Aug 
7,    1906 

Criticizing  the  seizure  of  the  prospectuses  of 
the  New  York  Art  Student's  League  by  Anthony 
Comstock,  and  asking  why  he  does  not  seize  the 
Encyclopaedia  Britannica  on  account  of  the  ar- 
ticle  entitled   "Metal  work." 

Mr  Comstock's  raid.  New  York  Times 
55:8  Aug  5,  1906 

Severe  criticism  of  Mr.  Comstock's  raid  on 
N.Y.  Art  Student's  League. 

Prudery  in  medicine,  in  law,  and  in  the 
fine  arts.  Medical  Brief  32:852-55  Oct. 
1904 

Prudery  opposed  as  against  welfare  of  com- 
munity, the  arts  and  sciences.  Supporting 
opinions   of   others  quoted. 

Science  and  art  protective  society.  Med- 
ico-legal Journal  37:3-6  Jan,   1920 
TS 

Article  inspired  by  prosecution  of  N.  M. 
Bcrthelot  Moens  in  D.C.  for  pictures  of  nudes 
made   in  course   of  studies  in   race   mixtures. 

Suppression  of  vice.   [Editorial]    New  York 

Evening  Post  Nov  28,    1887 
TS 

Editorial  against  art  censorship.  Inspired  by 
prosecution   of   Knoedler. 

Tyomies  publishing  company,  Nummivuori, 
John,  and  Salminen,  John 

United  States  Circuit  court  of  appeals 
for  the  sixth  circuit.  [Tyomies  publish- 
ing company,  John  Nummivuori,  and 
John  Salminen  plaintiffs  in  error,  vs. 
United  States  of  Ainerica,  defendant  in 
error.]  no.  2505  .  .  .  Hancock,  Mich., 
Tyomies    printing   co.    [1912]    16p 

TS 

Defendants  convicted  on  caricatures  published 
in  Lapatossi  for  April  12  and  Dec.  13,  1912. 
This  was   a   Finnish   periodical   published  at   Han- 


cock,  Mich. 


Birth  Control 


Abbott,    Leonard   D. 

Historical  side  of  the  birth  control  move- 
ment. Mother  Earth  11:451-56  April, 
1916 

Gives    sonic    account    of    legal    suppression    and 
violations  of  law,  both  in   U.S.   and  Europe. 

Present  status  of  the  Sanger  case.  Mother 
Earth    10:451-2   March,    1915 
TS 

Concerns   William   Sanger's   arrest   for   impart- 
ing birth  control  information. 


FREE  SPEECH 


189 


Reflections    on    Emma    Goldman's    trial. 
Mother  Earth   11:504-7  May,   1916 
TS 

Trial  and  conviction  of  Emma  Goldman  for 
disseminating  birth  control  information;  is  days 
in  jail,   $100  fine. 

Sanger  case.  Mother  Earth  9:379-80  Feb, 
1915 
TS 

Tells  of  nrrest  of  William  Sanger  for  giving 
birth  control  information. 

AUbutt,  Henry  Arthur 

Artificial  checks  to  population:  is  the 
popular  teaching  of  them  infamous?  A 
history  of  medical  persecutions.  Lon- 
don, George  Standring  1909  35p 

Allison,  Van  K. 

Supreme  judicial  court  for  the  common- 
wealth; Suffolk  county,  March  sitting, 
1917.  [Commonwealth  v.  Van  K.  Al- 
lison.! Brief  for  the  defendant.  n.p.,n.d. 
[1917]  26p 
TS 

Birth  control  information  alleged  to  be  "ob- 
scene" and  otherwise  violative  of  statute.  Plead 
cuilty.  Appealed  for  failure  to  quash  indictment. 
Sentence  affirmed. 

Allison  case  reviewed.  Critic  and  Guide 
Sept,    1916   p37-8 

Allison  was  convicted  in  Massachusetts  for 
imparting   birth   control   information. 

Ashley,  Jessie 

Successful  law-breaking.  Masses  Jan,  1917 

pl6-17 
Woman's  fight  for  free  speech.  New  York 

Call   Feb  27,   1916 

Deals    mainly    with    birth   control    information, 

but  has  some  I.  W.  W.  cases. 

Battle  over  birth  control.  Current  Opinion 
Nov,   1915  p339-40 

Review  of  current  events  and  discussion. 

Beck,  Carl 

Birth  control  movement;  ethical  and  legal 
dcfensibility  and  eugenic  aspects.  Lib- 
eral Review  2:23-6  Feb,   1917 

Birth-control  case;  technical  plea  of  guilty 
made:  judge  sentences  Allison  to  two 
months'  hard  labor.  Boston  Evening 
Globe   90:1    Nov   21.    1916 

Bonner,  Hypatia  Bradlaugh,  1858-,  and 
Robertson,  John  M. 
Record  of  the  life  and  work  of  Charles 
Bradlaugh;  with  an  account  of  his 
parliamentary  struggle,  politics  and 
teachings,  by  John  M.  Robertson.  Lon- 
don, T.  F.  Unwin  1895  2v 

NY 

Bradlaugh  made  great  historic  fight  for  right 
of  an  infidel  to  sit  in  House  of  Commons.  Also 
was  arrested  for  distributing  birth  control  in- 
formation alleged  to  be  "obscene." 

See  Bradlaugh  v.  Queen,  Law  Reports,  Queen's 
Bench  Division  3:607;  2:560.  For  blasphemy 
see  R.  V.  Bradlaujh.  Cox  Criminal  Cases  is: 
317-25;  Whorton,  Criminal  law,  3:^116-18.  He 
won   out   in   all   three  cases. 

Breckinridge,  Harry 

Persecution  of  Margaret  Sanger.   Mother 
Earth  9:296-7  Nov,    1914 
TS 

Ascribes  opposition  to  birth  control  to  capital 
'sf's  greed. 


Bryant,   Louise 

A    new    adventure    in    Arcadia.     Mother 
Earth    10:235-41    Sept.    1915 

Reports  arrest,  conviction,  appeal,  and  dis- 
charge of  Emma  Goldman  and  Ben  Reitman,  at 
Portland,  Oregon,  for  giving  birth  control  in- 
formation. 

Case  of  Mr  Bradlaugh.  Irish  Law  Times\ 
and  Solicitor's  Journal  17:225  April  28,' 
1883 

Quotation    from    Law  Journal. 

Chervin,  Harriet  T. 

Birth     control     propaganda     in     Oregon. 
Mother  Earth  11:641-3  Oct,  1916 
TS 

Recounts  conviction  of  Carl  Rave  for  "obscen- 
ity"   in   selling  birth   control   information. 

Christian  Life.  [Magazine]  vol.  3  no.  87 
Nov  2,   1889 

TS 

Suppressed  and  the  editor,  J.  B.  Caldwell. 
arrested.     Advocates  "coition  for  offspring  only." 

Comstock  defeated.  Truth  Seeker  7:652  Oct 

11.  1879 
TS 

Tells  of  arrest  and  acquital  of  Peter  F.  Weil 
charged  with  selling  "obscene"  photos.  Also  case 
of  E.  W.  Baxter  acquited  for  selling  contracep- 
tives. 

Control  of  births  [editorial].  New  Republic 
n.p.,  n.d.  4p 

TS 

.\dvocates  freedom  for  birth  control  informa- 
tion. 

Conway,  Moncure  D[aniel] 

Charles   Bradlaugh.   Open    Court  4:2707-8 
Feb  19,  1891 
TS 

Reviews  and  criticises  prosecution  of  Brad- 
lausrh  and  Besant  for  selling  Fruits  of  phil- 
osophy. 

Deutsch,   Mrs  E.  Z. 

Is   Dr   Robinson  a   champion   of  woman- 
hood?   Critic   and    Guide    16:243-9  July. 
1913 
D'Joinville,  Luigi  A. 

Necessity    of    birth    control    propaganda. 
Mother   Earth   12:53-5   April,   1917 
TS 

Argues  for  freedom  to  instruct  in  birth  con- 
trol. 

Eager  crowd  fills  court  to  hear  Allison 
case.    Boston  Traveler  Julv  20.  1916 

TS 

Fawcett.   James   Waldo 

(ed.)  Trial  of  William  Sanger.  September 
10th.  1915;  with  an  introduction  by 
Tames  Waldo  Fawcett.  (Cover)  Jailed 
"for  birth  control:  the  trial  of  William 
Sanger.  September  10.  1915;  ed.  by 
James  Waldo  Fawcett.  (Inside  title 
page)  New  York.  Margaret  H.  Sanger. 
104  5th  av.  n.d.  16p 

Field,  James  Alfred,  1880- 

[ Publicity  by  prosecution;  a  commentary 
on   the'  birth  control  propaganda.    Sur- 
vey 35:599-601   Feb  19.   1916 
RG    16 
Foote.   Edward   Bliss,   1^29-1906 

Anthony   Comstock.   Truth   Dec    19.    lS/9 
TS 


190 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Foote,  Edward  Bliss— Continued 

Confidential  pamphlet  for  the  married; 
words  of  pearl  for  married  people  only. 
New   York,   The  author   1875  32p 

Up  to  page  19  this  is  the  same  as  suppressed 
pamphlet  of  same  title.  Where  formerly  infor- 
mation on  "reliable  preventives"  was  given,  it 
quotes  and  discredits  statutes  prohibiting  such 
information. 

Dr  E.  B.  Foote's  statement.  Three  Rivers, 
(Mich.)   Reporter  no.  807  Aug  13,  1876 
TS 

The    law's    vulgarity.    W'instcd     (Conn.) 
Press   July  27,    1876 
TS 

An  outrage.  Bergen  (N.J.)  Index  Feb  12, 
1876 
TS 

Step  backward;  in  reviewing  inconsiderate 
legislation,  concerning  articles  and 
things  for  the  prevention  of  conception. 
New  York,  Issued  by  the  author  [Mur- 
ray Hill  publishing  co.]  1875  16p 
Fuld 

Der  entwurf  cines  neuen  patentgesetzes 
und  die  antikonzeptionellen  mittel. 
Sexual-probleme  der  zeitschrift  "Mut- 
terschutz."   9:657-63    Frankfort    1913 

[Gale,  Linn  A.  E.] 

Birth  control  and  Paris  Green.  Gale's 
Magazine    1:3  and   18  Feb,   1918 

Curse  of  birth  control.  Gale's  Magazine 
1:     Dec,  1917 

Goldman,  Emma 

Again  the  birth  control  agitation.  Mother 
Earth  11:669-70  Nov,  1916 
TS 

Acquital  of  Bolton  Hall  and  an  opinion  by 
Judge  Wadhaus  in  a  case  of  theft  necessitated  by 
large  family. 

[Birth    control    and    free    speech.]     [Ed- 
itorial]    Mother    Earth     11:533-4    July, 
1916 
TS 

Reports  arrest  of  Ida  Rauh  and  Bolton  Hall. 

[Birth  control  propaganda.]  [Editorial] 
Mother  Earth   12:4  March,   1917 


TS 


Ben  Reitman  sentenced  six  months  and  $1,000 
fine  and  Mrs  Ralph  D.  Mitchell  arrested. 

[Conviction    of    Van    K.    Allison.]     [Ed- 
itorial] Mother  Earth  11:562-3  Aug,  1916 
TS 

Three  years  imprisonment  for  this  editor  of 
The  Flame  for  giving  birth  control  information. 

[Decency    and    morality    are    saved    once 
more.]     [Editorial]     Mother    Earth    11: 
509-11    May,   1916 
TS 

Comments  on  her  conviction  for  giving  birth 
control  information. 

Despite  Jehovah  and   the  police.   Mother 
Earth    11:730-3   Jan,    1917 
TS 

Tells  of  arrest  of  Ben  Reitman  for  giving 
birth  control  information  at  Cleveland,  Ohio. 
Later  served  term  in  jail  therefor. 


Emma  Goldman  before  the  bar.  [The 
people  of  the  state  of  New  York  v. 
Emma  Goldman].  Alother  Earth  9:496- 
507  May,   1916 

Argument  on  trial  for  disseminating  birth  con- 
trol information.  Also  published  in  The  Masses, 
June   1916. 

Emma    Goldman's    defense.    Masses    8:27 
(No.  8) 
TS 

Speech  at  trial  for  spreading  birth  control  in- 
formation. See  also  Mother  Earth  for  March, 
1916. 

Margaret      Sanger's      case.       [Editorial] 
Mother   Earth   11:422  March.   1916 
TS 

Reports  dismissal  of  Sanger  case. 

My     arrest     and      preliminary     hearing. 
Mother  Earth  11:426-30  March,  1916 
TS 

Gives  account  of  arrest  for  birth  control  lec- 
ture. 

Social  aspects  of  birth  control.  Mother 
Earth   11:468-78  April,  1916 

Speech  at  Carnegie  Hall,  New  York  City 
March  i,  1916. 

An  urgent  appeal  to  mv  friends.  Mother 
Earth    11:450-1   April,   1916 
TS 

For  support  of  trial  on  birth  control  charge, 
and  of  Mother  Earth. 

Goldstein 

Das  gesetzliche  verbot  der  schwanger- 
schaftsunterbrechung.  Denkschrift  zu  § 
218.  Str.  Ges  B.  Strafrechtscommission 
iibcrreicht.    Berlin    15p 

Goldwater,  A.  L. 

Abstract  of  Dr  A.  L.  Goldwater's  speech. 
Mother  Earth  11:460-3  April,  1916 

TS 

Birth  control  mass  meeting  to  protest  against 
arrest  of  Emma  Goldman  et  al.  held  at  Carnegie 
Hall,  New  York  City,  March  1,  1916. 

Gott,  J.  W. 

Special.  Freethinker  (London)  41:105  Feb 
13.  1921 
TS 

States  the  attitude  of  (British)  National 
secular  society  to  the  latest  arrest  of  J.  W.  Gott 
on  charges  of  blasphemy  and  obscenity.  The 
former  for  Rib  tickler;  the  latter  for  How  to 
prevent  conception. 

Special.  Freethinker  (London)  41:169 
March   13,   1921 

Gives  account  of  another  conviction  of  this 
man.  both  for  blasphemy  and  obscenity.  The 
latter  consisted  in  imparting  information  for 
birth  control.  Republished  in  Truthseeker  48:216 
April  2,   1921. 

Howarth,  Edmimd 

Birth  control  prosecution.  The  Liberator 
1:2  n.d.  [1920] 

Indictment  and  account  of  trial  of  Howarth 
for  circulating  an  "obscene"  pamphlet,  Large  or 
small  families,  by  George  H.  Suasey.  Howarth 
found    guilty    in    County    Durham,    England. 

Interesting  lawsuit;  ]\Irs  Annie  Besant.  a 
Malthusian,  sues  for  libel;  does  _Mrs 
Besant  teach  unchastity  and  unbridled 
sensuality?    So    an    English    rector    de- 


FREE    SPEECH 


191 


TS 


clared.  Mrs  Besant  conducting  her  own 
case;  the  jury  disagree.  The  Sun  [Sun- 
day,  Nov,   1889]    p24 


Mrs  B.  a  candidate  for  school  office  was  ac- 
cused of  teaching  that  "Chastity  was  a  crime," 
etc.,  largely  based  on  birth  control  opinions. 

Is  limitation  of  the  family  immoral?  Judg- 
ment on  Annie  Bcsant's  "Law  of  pop- 
ulation," delivered  in  the  Supreme  court 
of  New  South  Wales  by  Mr  Justice 
Windeyer.  London,  Freethought  pub- 
lishing CO.  1889  26p 

Joinville,  Luigi  A.  de 

Necessity  of  birth  control  propaganda. 
Mother   Earth    12:53-5  April,   1917 

Louis,  I.  Balch 

Remedial  legislation  relative  to  preven- 
tion of  conception.  Critic  and  Guide  1913 
p210-12 

McLeod,   Hugh 

Another  Japanese  problem.  New  Republic 
25:184-86  Oct  20,  1920 

TS 

The  author-physician,  member  of  Japanese  Ex- 
clusion league  is  asked  by  a  Japanese  resident 
here  to  give  birth  control  information  and  is 
perplexed. 

Morgan,  J. 

An  important  secret  revealed;  or.  How 
to  regulate  the  number  of  a  family. 
London,  E.  Truelove  7p 

For  this  Truelove  was  prosecuted. 

Morris,  Robert 

Free    speech    and    birth    control    dinner. 
Mother    Earth    11:518-20    May,    1916 
TS 

Morton,  James  F[erdinandl   jr.,  1870- 
Freedom    of    speech    and    birth    control. 

Paladin    1:2   and   4   No.   3 
Origin  and  working  of  the  Comstock  law. 
Birth    Control    Review    3:5-7,    18    May, 
1919 
TS 

Mother    Earth.    [Magazine.]    April,    1916 

Birth  control  number,  April,  1916.  Centers 
around  the  prosecution  of  Emma  Goldman  for 
distribution   of  birth   control  leaflet. 

Murphy,  J.   P. 

Allison  case.  Survey  37:266-7  1916 

Norwood,   Paul 

Birth-control,  a  new  crime.  Critic  and 
Guide  1917  p78 

Notes  of  cases.  [Reg.  v.  Bradlaugh.]  Crim- 
inal   Law    Magazine    4:592-3    1883 

Reprints  an  article  from  the  Law  Times.  For 
decision  see:  Law  Reports,  Queen's  bench  divi- 
sion 2:568,   1877. 

Noyes,    John    Humphrey 

Male  continence.  Oneida,  The  Oneida 
community    1872   24p 

For  this  Noyes  was  prosecuted  and  convicted. 
This   report  to  me  has  been  later  questioned. 

Numbering  the  day  of  Penal  section  1142. 
Survey  34:211   1915 

Old   playgoer,  pseud. 

Miss  Goldman's  trial.  Pearson's  Magazine 
38:132-43    no.    3 


Owen,   Robert  Dale,   1801-1877 

Moral  physiology;  a  treatise  on  popular 
questions,  or  means  devised  to  check 
pregnancy;  by  a  physician.  New  York, 
Printed  for  the  author  1836  76p 

Birth  control  information  suppressed  as  "ob- 
scene." 

Pennsylvania.   House  of  representatives 

An  act  introduced  by  Mr  Stern,  April  24, 
1917;  Mr  McArdle,  law  and  order.  May 
8,  1917.  (File  of  the  House  of  repre- 
sentatives, no.  1643;  sess.  of  1917)  n.p., 
n.d.  Ip 
TS 

A  proposed  law  to  penalize  everything  tending 
to    diminish   birth    rate. 

Points  of  law  in  the  Bradlaugh  prosecution. 
Irish  Law  Times  and  Solicitors  Journal 
April  28,  1883 

Quoting  the   Law  Times    17:224. 

Protest  of  forty  San  Francisco  women;  ad- 
dressed to  Judge  O'Keefe,  of  the  court 
of  special  sessions.  Mother  Earth  11: 
521-2  May,  1916 

TS 

Against  conviction  of  Emma  Goldman  for  giv- 
ing  birth    control   information. 

Purves,    [George] 

Gray  versus  Malthus:  the  principles  of 
population  and  production  investigated, 
and  the  questions  docs  population  reg- 
ulate subsistance,  or  subsistance  pop- 
ulation?   .  .  .    1818 

Queen  vs.  Charles  Bradlaugh  and  Annie 
Besant.  London,  Freethought  publish- 
ing CO.  1877  355p 

For  official  opinion  see  Law  Reports,  Queen's 
Bench  Division  3:607.  Convicts  released  on  tech- 
nical  question. 

Reinwald,  Etta 

Das  recht  dcr  enterbten;  ein  wort  fiir 
den    neomalthusianismus.    Leipzig    1897 

Reitman,  Benjamin  L. 

Cleveland  myth.  ^Mother  Earth  11:761-5 
Feb.  1917 

Tells  of  trial  and  conviction  of  Reitman  for 
giving  birth   control   information. 

"Pinched."    Mother    Earth    11:507-8    May, 
1916 
TS 

Right  of  free  speech  strangled  in  St  Louis. 
Melting   Pot    14:3-6   no.   7 

Deals  with  Margaret  Sanger's  birth  control 
propaganda  being  suppressed  by  Catholic  influ- 
ence with   theater  owners. 

Robinson,  Victor 

Pioneers    of    birth    control.    New    York, 
Voluntary    parenthood    league    [1919] 
TS 
Robinson,  William  Josephus 

Birth  control  and  war.  Voice  in  the 
Wilderness    1:29    (no.   2) 

For  this  magazine  Dr  Robinson  was  indicted 
under   the   Espionage   act. 

Birth  control  from  the  bench.  Critic  and 

Guide    1916   p401 
Comstockian    outrage.    Critic    and    Guide 

1915   p242 


192 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Robinson,  W:  J. — Continued 

Country  in  which  prevention  of  concep- 
tion is  officially  sanctioned.  Critic  and 
Guide    1914    pl73 

Formula  for  prevention  of  conception. 
Critic  and  Guide  Nov,  1907  plS7 

For  this  Dr  Robinson  was  threatened  with 
prosecution,  though  he  offered  formula  only  to 
physicians. 

Hov\^  to  abolish  the  law  against  the  pre- 
vention of  conception.  Critic  and  Guide 
1915   p82 

Most    atrocious    law;    extracts    from    ad- 
dress made   at   Carnegie   Hall   meeting. 
March.  1,  1916.  Mother  Earth  11:457-60 
1916 
TS 

Protest  over  arrest  of  Emma  Goldman  and 
others. 

An    open    letter    to    Anthony    Comstock. 
Critic  and  Guide  16:225-6  July,  1913 
TS 

Deals  with  postal  censorship  on  information 
for  prevention  of  conception. 

Ruppenthat,  J.  C. 

Criminal  statutes  on  birth  control.  Med- 
ical World;  republished  in  Birth  Con- 
trol Review  2:10-13  and  16  Oct,   1918 

Quotes  all  state  and  national  laws  penalizing 
the  dissemination  of  information  on  the  preven- 
tion  of   conception. 

Sanger,  Margaret  H. 

Case  for  birth  control;  a  supplementary 
brief  and  statement  of  facts,  prepared 
by  Margaret  Sanger  to  aid  the  court 
in  its  consideration  of  the  statute  de- 
signed to  prevent  the  dissemination  of 
information  for  preventing  conception. 
New  York,   The   author   1917  6-251p 

TS 

This  was  prepared  as  part  of  defense  before 
the  New  York  courts,  on  charge  of  circulating  in- 
formation for  prevention  of  conception. 

Fight  for  birth  control.  Phvsical  Culture 
April,   1917 

Letter    from     Margaret    Sanger.     ]\Iother 
Earth    10:75-8  April,    1915 
TS 

Account  of  suppression  of  Woman  Rebel  for 
March,  May,  July,  Aug.,  Sept.  and  Oct.  iqi4,  and 
arrest  of  Mrs  Sanger,  its  editor,  on  charge  of 
"obscenity." 

Shall  we  break  this  law?  Birth  Control 
Review  Feb,  1917   (no.   1) 

Supreme  court,  appellate  division — 
second  department.  [People  of  the  state 
of  New  York  ex  rel  Margaret  H. 
Sanger,  Ethel  Byrne  and  Fannie  Min- 
dell  1  Appellant's  brief  in  support  of 
motion  for  stay  of  proceedings.  New 
York,    Hecla    Press   n.d.    56p 

Mrs  Sanger,  Ethel  Byrne  and  Fannie  Mindell 
convicted  for  giving  birth   control  information. 

To  mv  friends.  IMother  Earth  10:405  Feb, 
1916 
TS 

A  letter  on  postponment  of  prosecution  for 
birth  control  discussion  and  request  for  agita- 
tion. 


A   victory,   a   new   year   and   a   new   day. 
Birth    Control    Review   3:3-4   Feb,    1919 
Tells    of    dismissal    of    obscenity    case    against 
her. 

Woman    rebel.    New   York 

Magazine,  suppressed  because  of  birth  control 
information. 

Sanger,  William 

Trial  of  William  Sanger,  September  10th, 
1915.   [New  York]   1917  15p 

Convicted  for  giving  birth  control  informa- 
tion. 

Sanger    case.    Mother    Earth    10:135    June, 

1915 
TS 

Cases  of  William  Sanger  for  birth  control  and 

Margaret    Sanger    as    editor    of    Woman    Rebel 

alleged    "obscene". 

Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,   1864- 

Abstract  of  Theodore  Schroeder's  speech 
[at  birth  control  meeting,  Carnegie 
Hall,  New  York  City,  March  1,  1916.] 
Mother  Earth  11:463-7  April,  1916 

TS 

Meeting  occasioned  by  arrest  of  Emma  Gold- 
man for  circulating  birth  control  information. 
Discusses  mental  attitude  of  judges  and  legisla- 
tors. 

Birth  control  and  the  German  war. 
American  Medicine  24:789-97  Dec,  1918 

TS 

Psychologic  interpretation  of  feudal-minded- 
ness  in  relation  to  the  control  of  birth  and  death, 
and  its  influence  in  producing  the  world  war. 

List  of  references  on   birth-control.   New 
York,  H.  W.  Wilson  co.   1918  S2p 
TS 

Lists  books,  pamphlets  and  articles  in  English, 
Dutch,  French,  German,  Italian,  Spanish  and 
other  languages  containing  pleas  from  all  points 
of  view. 

"Shall  child-bearing  be  made  compulsory?" 
New  Review  2:430-2  July,  1914 

Sperry,  Lyman  Beecher 

Husband  and  wife.  New  York,  Rcvcll  co. 
1900 

Argument  in  favor  of  birth  control,  pi39;SS- 
The  early  editions  gave  prohibited  information. 
This  part  of  the  book  was  voluntarily  suppressed 
by  the  publishers. 

Swasey,  George 

Birth     control     speaker    convicted.     Birth 
Control    Review   3:15    Sept,    1919 
TS 

Convicted  for  using  the  word  "prostitute"  in 
a  street  corner  speech  for  birth  control. 

To  the  gentlemen  of  the  drug  trade  who 
may  be  interested  in  the  recent  Com- 
stock  raids.   Broadside   n.p..   n.d. 

TS 

Opposed    suppression    of    birth    control    infor- 
mation and  materials. 
Trials  of   the   birth   control   advocates.   Sur- 
vey 37:555   Feb   10,    1917 

Truelove,  Edward 

In  the  High  court  of  justice:  Q"fen  s 
bench  division,  February  1,  18/8.  [The 
Queen  v.  Edward  Truelove,  for  pub- 
lishing   the    Hon    Robert    Dale    Owen  s 


FREE    SPEECH 


193 


TS 


Moral  philosophy,  and  a  pamphlet,  en- 
titled Individual,  family  and  national 
poverty.]  London,  E.  Truclovc  1878 
viii,125p 


Birth  control  information  caused  arrest  on 
charge  of  "obscenity."  Jury  disagreed  and  was 
discharged. 

Two  months  in  jail  sentence  of  Allison; 
birth  control  advocate  given  stay 
pending  outcome  of  appeal  to  supreme 
court — denies  giving  pamphlets  to  fac- 
tory girls.  Boston  Journal  Nov  22,  1916 

Uthoff,  H.  C. 

Light  sentence  for  prevention  of  concep- 
tion propaganda.  Critic  and  Guide  1914 
pl58 

War  on  free  speech.  Truth  Seeker  43:389 
June   17.   1916 

Deals  with  arrest  of  Emma  Goldman,  Bolton 
Hall  and  others  for  birth  control  propaganda. 

Weinberger,   Harry 

And  still  they  come.  Public  19:464-5  1916 
Reitman    and    Rochester.    Mother    Earth 
12:44-6  April,   1917 
TS 

Tells  of  trial  and  acquittal  of  Benjamin  Reit- 
man at  Rochester,  N.Y.  on  charge  of  giving  birth 
control    information. 

Willkiirliche  regclung  der  geburtcn  im  lichte 
des  rcchtes,  der  moral  und  der  gesund- 
heit:  ein  beitrag  zur  strafrechtsreform. 
Berlin,  Zeit-verlag  1911  61p 

Wittels,  Fritz 

Law  against  abortion — the  greatest  crime 
on  the  statute  books.  Critic  and  Guide 
1915  pl71-80 

Law  prohibits  information  where  and  how  an 
abortion  can  be  secured,  also  prevention  of  con- 
ception information. 

Literature  (General) 

American  railway  literary  union 

Information  and  suggestions  regarding 
pernicious  literature.  n.t,r>.,  n.p.  [1879] 
43p 

B 

"Knowledge  and  virtue."  The  American 
'  railway  literary  union;  its  origin,  his- 
tory and  constitution;  for  the  United 
States  and  British  American  provinces, 
March,  1865.  [Rochester,  N.Y.]  For  the 
Union  1865  15p 

LC  NY 

Anthony  Comstock  in  the  role  of  literary 
censor.  Current  Opinion  55:353  Nov, 
1913 

RG  '10-14 

Arrangement  between  the  United  States  and 
other  powers  relative  to  the  repression 
of  the  circulation  of  obscene  publica- 
tions. (U.S.  Treaty  ser.  no.  559)  Amer- 
ican Journal  of  International  Law  5: 
supl67-7l    Julv,    1911 

Y 

Arrest  of  the  editor.  Pioneer  Press  .\ug  5; 
1899 

TS 

Revised  ami   reprinted  in  form  of  a  broadside. 
See  Clifford.  J.  R.  Also  U.S.  v.  Clifford,  Fed- 
eral Reporter   104:296 


Bacon,    Corinnc 

What  makes  a  novel  immoral,  rev  ed 
New  York,  II.  W.  \\'ilson  co.  1914  24p 

Discussion  from  conservative  viewpoint  of  the 
librarian. 

Balderston,  John  i^loyd 

Freedom  of  the  pen;  a  conversation  with 
George  Moore.  Fortnightly  Review  108: 
539-51    Oct,   1917 
RG  '17 

Bayle,  Pierre,  1647-1706 

SUr  les  obsccnites;  remarques  par  Pierre 
Bayle,  pub.  pour  la  premiere  fois  scp- 
aremcnt  avec  une  notice  bibliogra- 
phique.  Bru.xellcs,  Gay  et  Douce,  1879 
106p 

.\n  English  version  of  this  is  included  in: 
I'rie  press  anthology,  by  Theodore  Schroeder, 
-Mr.  Bayle's  Historical  and  Critical  dictionary, 
the  second  edition,  London,  1738,  5:837-58.  A 
fine   criticism    of  the    theory   of   sex-censorship. 

Bennett,   De    Robique    Mortimer,    1818-1882 
For  mailing  prohibited  matter.  New  York 

1879 
Open  letter  to  Jesus  Christ.  (Truth  seek- 
er   tracts,    no.    54)    [New    York,    Truth 
seeker   publishing   co.]    n.d.   31p 
TS 

For  this  Mr.  Comstock  arrested  Bennett  on 
charge  of'  "obscenity".  Ingersoll  used  his  influ- 
ence at  Washington  and  case  was  allowed  to  die 
a  natural  death. 

Open  letter  to  Samuel  Colgate  touching 
the  conduct  of  .A.nthony  Comstock  and 
the  New  York  Society  for  the  suppres- 
sion of  vice.  New  York,  D.  M.  Bennett 
1879  93p 
TS 

Colgate  was  president  of  the  New  York  society 
for  the  suppression  of  vice.  Gives  concrete  in- 
formation   on    operation   of   sex-censorship. 

Berenger,  Rene 

Manuel   pratique   pour   la   lutte   contre   la 
pornographic.    Paris,    P.    Mouillot    1907 
172p 
NY 

Bethleem,  Louis 

Romans  a  lire  et  romans  a  proscrire; 
e.ssai  de  classification  au  point  de  vue 
moral  des  principaux  romans  et  roman- 
ciers  de  notre  epoquc  (1800-1906):  avec 
notes  et  indications  pratiques.  3e  cd 
Cambrai,  Masson  1906  xxxii.382p 
B  NY 

Blumml,  EmU  Karl,  18S1- 

Futilitatcs:   beitnige   zur  volkskundlichen 
erotik    .  .  .    Vienna.    G.    Rottig    &    sohn 
1908 
LC  NY 
Boyd,  Ernest 

Adult  or  infantile  censorship.  Dial  70:381- 
85   April.   1921 
TS 

.\sks   abolition   of  private  societies  for  censor- 
ship  enforcement.      Gives   some   account   of  cen- 
sorship in  France. 
Brainard  sure  to  be  tried  in  January.  New 
York   Journal    Dec    13.    1919 

C.  T.  Brainard,  President  of  Harper  Brotheri 
arrested   for:    Madeleine   an   Autobiography. 


194 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Broun,  Heywood,  and  Lewis,  E.  M. 

Heywood   Broun  comes  to  the  rescue  of 
"immoral"  books.   Current  Opinion   67: 
315-16   Dec.    1919 
TS 

Summarises  a  discussion  by  the  two  who  argue 
about  the  arrest  of  C.  T.  Brainard  of  Harper 
Brothers  for  Madeleine.  Also  library  suppres- 
sion of  W.  S.  Maugham's  novel  The  moon  and 
six  pence. 

Brown,  Charles  Turner 

Legal   discussion    of   the    obscenity    laws. 
Physical   Culture    15:395-7    1906 
Buchanan,    Robert 

On  freedom  in  literature.  Physical  Cul- 
ture  18:266-8   Oct,   1907 

This  is  part  of  essay:  On  decending  into  hell. 

Burrows,  Ethelbert  D. 

Protest  and  a  query  or  two.  Lippincott's 
Monthly  Magazine  93:383-4  March,  1914 
RG  '10-14 

Case  against  the  Menace;  the  Italian  pope's 
effort  to  destroy  the  freedom  of  the 
press.    Jeflfersonian    Jan    6,    1916 

TS 

Around  the  indictment  of  the  Menace.  Tom 
Watson  writes  a  long  criticism  of  the  Romanist 
censorship. 

Case   of   "Hagar    Revelly."    Green    Bag   26: 

115-19   March,   1914 
ILP 

Caverno,    Charles 

Christ  and  the  physical  basis  of  marriage. 
The  Light,  ninth  year,  no.  52  p233-38 
Nov,   1906 

Cleary,    William 

New  York  Supreme  court,  appellate  div- 
ision— first  department.  [People  of  the 
state  of  New  York,  respondent,  against 
William  Cleary,  appellant.]  Case  on  ap- 
peal. New  York  [1914]  31p 
TS 

Defendant  convicted  of  selling  Hagar  Revelly 
by  Daniel  C.  Goodman.  Kennerley,  the  publisher 
was  acquitted.  Cleary's  appeal  dismissed  by  con- 
sent. 

Sold  "Hagar  Revelly,"  gets  ten  day  jail 
term.  New  York  Call  Dec  30,  1913 

This  clerk  convicted  in  New  York  state  court. 
Kennerley,  his  employer,  acquitted  in  United 
States   Court   because   same   book  not   "obscene". 

Coomer,  Hobart 

United  States  Circuit  court  of  appeals, 
eighth  circuit.  No.  4050.  Hobart  Coomer, 
plaintifif  in  error.  In  error  to  district 
court  of  the  United  States  for  the 
western  district  of  Oklahoma.  New 
York  1914  24p 
TS 

Cuenoud,  John 

Litterature  immorale  et  la  criminalite: 
Conference  populaire  donniee  a  Geneve. 
Geneva,  Wyss  &  Duchene   1894  47p 

NY 

Cisseres,    Benjamin    de 

Case  of  prudery  against  literature;  attack 
on  Gautier's  novel  brings  to  mind  many 
historic   examples    of  law's   moral   cen- 


sorship of  books.  New  York  Times  sec- 
tion 7  p3  May  23   1920 
TS 

Historical  discussion  around  trial  of  case  of 
Halsey,  Raymond  D.  vs.  Sumner,  John  E.  where 
damages   were   awarded  for  false   arrest. 

Defense    of    French    immoralism.     Current 

Literature  52:320-2   March,    1912 
RG  '10-14 

Dreiser,  Theodore 

The    "genius."    New    York    and    London, 
John    Lane   co.    1915   736p 
TS 

Suppressed   for    "obscenity    and   blasphemy." 

Eastman,  N.  L.  A. 

Open  door  to  hell;  a  brief  account  of  the 
trial  of  Bishop  Eastman;  every  article 
for  which  he  was  indicted  is  herein 
printed.  ***  Milan.  111.  Truth  and  Light 
Publishing  House,  n.d.    [1919?] 

Between  1905-8  was  indicted  s  times  and  on 
0  counts,  in  both  State  and  U.S.  courts,  for 
libel  and  obscenity.  See:  People  v.  Eastman, 
188  N.Y.  Rep.  478.  The  original  articles  were 
all  directed  against  Romanism,  and  appeared  in 
the  Gospel  Worker,  for  May  1904;  Feb.  1906; 
May,  Aug.  Sept.  Oct.  and  Nov.  1907.  Finally 
acquitted   on    all. 

What  constitutes  "indecent"  publication; 
interpretation  of  section  317  of  the 
penal  code;  court  of  appeals.  [People 
of  the  state  of  New  York,  appellant,  vs. 
Newton  L.  S.  Eastman,  respondent.] 
New  York  Law  Journal  27:1009  June 
7,  1907 
TS 

For  decision  see  New  York  Reports  188:478, 
and  North  Eastern  Reporter  80:459.  Deals  with 
an  ill  tempered  criticism  of  Catholic  nunneries 
and  their  alleged  immoralities. 

Fight  against  poisonous  literature.  Current 

Literature   52:468-71    April,    1912 
RG  '10-14 

Flower,  Benjamin  Orange,  1858-1918 

Free  press  lives — Menace  acquitted;  the 
Roman  Catholic  hierarchy  and  its  allies 
in  the  government  service  ingloriously 
defeated  in  greatest  legal  battle  of  the 
ages  .  .  .  truth  is  mightv  and  shall  pre- 
vail.   Menace  Jan   22,    1916 

TS 

Discussion  of  trial  of  publishers  of  Menace 
for   alleged   "obscene"   criticism   of   romanism. 

Foote,    Edward    Bliss,    1829-1906 

Purifying  the  mails.  What  is  obscene  lit- 
erature?— The  tyranny  of  ultra-moral- 
ity; violating  the  rights  of  correspon- 
dence— a  noted  New  York  case.  Times 
(Chicago)   Aug  26,  1876 

TS 

Foote.  Edward  Bond,  1854-1912.  and  Foote, 
Edward    Bliss,    1829-1906 
To    the    press.    Broadside    n  d.    probably 
about  1884 


TS 


Gives  an  account  of  suppression  of  a  period- 
ical. House  and  Home,  for  publishing  an  adver- 
tisement of  Dr.  Foote's  Handbook  of  health 
hints.  Also  exclusion  of  Foote's  Health  Monthly 
from  the  U.S.  when  published  in  Canada;  also 
refusal  of  New  York  papers  to  accept  advertise- 
ments of  these  matters. 


FREE    SPEECH 


195 


Foster,  J.   Herbert 
"  'Obscene'    literature    and    constitutional 
law.'  Sexual  Life  no.  67  Oct,  1911 

TS 

A  favorable  review  of  T.   Schroeder's  book. 

Germany  poisoning  French  letters.  Literary 

Digest  54:1331-2  May  5,   1917 
RG  '17 

Harris,  Frank 

Sumner  and  his  satellites.  Pearson's  Mag- 
azine 38:362-3   Feb.   1918 

Sumner  was  secretary  of  the  New  York  So- 
ciety for  the  suppression  of  vice.  This  article 
refers  to  some  of  his  activities  as  censor  and 
charges  financial  dishonesty. 

Sumner  whipped  for  the  third  time  run- 
ning.   Pearson's    Magazine    38:15    (Xo. 
1) 
Harvey,    Alexander 

The  Bang.  v9  no.  23,   Feb  28,   1916 

The  whole  issue  is  devoted  to  John  S.  Sumner 
and  the  work  of  the  New  York  Society  for  the 
suppression   of   vice.     No  title  given. 

Havel,  Hippolyte 

Immoral    writer.    Mother    Earth    5:194-9 
August,  1910 
TS 

Deals  with  M.   Artzibashev  approvingly. 

Haynes,  Edmund  Sidney  Pollock,  1877- 
Taboos    of    the    British    museum    library. 
English    Review    16:123-34   Dec,    1913 
RGS   '07-15 

Gives  specific  information  of  library  censor- 
ship and  criticizes  the  same. 

[Hubbard,  James  Mascarene] 
Public    library    and    the    school    children; 
an    appeal    to    the    parents,    clergymen, 
and    teachers    of    Boston.    Boston    1881 
23p 

LC  NY 

Hughes,  Helen  Sard 

On  the  privileges  of  realists.  North  Amer- 
ican  Review   197:538-41   April,   1913 
RG  '10-14 

Hunt,-  Albert   F. 

"Almost     fourteen."      North     Tarrytoun 
Telephone  Sept  2,  1897 
TS 

Upholds  book  and  denounces  "Watch  and 
Ward  Society"  for  causing  arrest  of  Hunt. 

Immoral  literature.  (In:  Shipley,  Orby,  ed- 
itor. The  church  and  the  world.  3:252- 
89)    London    1868 

B 

Impurity  in  the  magazines.  Literary  Digest 
47:178  Aug  2,  1913 

RG   '10-14 

Indecent   mail    matter.    Public    14:1067    Oct 

20.   1911 
AMI  *11 
Is  censorship  useless  as  a  weapon   against 

literary  obscenity?  Current  Opinion  56: 

298-9   April.    1914 
RG  '10-14 


Johnson,  William  L. 

Communications.  Newburyport  Item  Aug 
7.    1897 
TS 

Argues  for  freedom  provoked  by  arrest  of  Al- 
bert F.  Hunt  for  republishing  Almost  fourteen, 
by  Mortimer  A.  Warren. 

KaUen,   H.   M. 

Protean  censorship.  Freeman  3:370-2  June 
29,  1921 

A  discussion  for  larger  freedom,  around  sup- 
pression of  James  B.   Cabell's   Jurgen. 

Kampf  gegen  die  schund-und  schmutz-lit- 
eratur;  verfiigung  des  Koniglichen  Kon- 
sistoriums  der  Provinz  Sachscn  vom  6 
mai.  1910.  Rotzeusec,  Dcutscher  sitt- 
lichkeitsverein   1910  lOp 

NY 

[Kennerley,   Mitchell] 

"Magar  Revelly"  not  immoral,  says  jury; 

takes    more    than    five    hours    to   acquit 

publisher   Kcnnerlev;   Comstock  not   in 

court  .  .  .  New  York  Sun  Feb   10,  1914 

TS 

Acquitted  for  selling  Daniel  Carson  Goodman's 
novel  because  not  "obscene".  But  see:  Cleary, 
William. 
Intent  governs  lewdness;  otherwise, 
judge  says,  Bible  could  be  excluded 
from  mails.  JefTersonian  Dec  4,  1913 

TS 

Quotes  and  comments  on  decision  of  Judge 
Hand  in  U.S.  Court  of  N.Y.  in  case  against 
Kennerley  (Mitchell)  for  publishing  Hagar 
Revelly,  by  D.  C.  Goodman. 

Judges  charge  in  the  Hagar  Revelly  case, 
by  William  J.  Robinson.  New  York  Call 
Feb    [11,   1914?] 
TS 

Criticises  judge's  instructions  as  to  test  of 
"obscenitv"  which  the  jury  ignored  and  acquitted 
the  publisher.  Previously  his  clerk,  William 
Cleaiy,  had  been  convicted  on  the  same  book. 

Knowles,  Freeman 

Convicted.  Lantern  4:[1]   May  28.  1908 

TS  .    .         ..  u 

Comments  on  his  own,  conviction  which  was 
affirmed  in  Federal  Reporter  170:409.  The 
offending  articles  are  republished  in  above  ar- 
ticle,   also    in    Industrial    relations.      Final    report 

and  testimony,   11:10877-8. 

Laporte,   Antoine 

Naturalisme     ou     I'immoralite     litterairc; 

fimile  Zola,  1  homme  ct  I'oeuvre.  Paris, 

Chez  I'autcur  1894  320p 
B 
Law  and   the   classics.   Case   and   Comment 

17:128  Aug,   1910 

Editorial,  commenting  on  the  decision  that 
Balzac's  works  are  not  held  obscene. 

Liber,   B.  .         r> 

Dr    Liber   and   the   post   office.    New    Re- 
public  20:61    Aug    13.    1919 
TS 

Tells  of  the  suppression  of  his  book  on  sexual 
life,  on  the  pretense  of  its  "indecency';  but  with 
private  confession  that  it  was  because  it  was  too 
radical  in  giving  economic  explanaUon  of  disease 
and  prostitution. 

Liberty  to  print.  Physical  Culture  19:309-10 
1908 

Editor  Macfadden  had  been  arrested  several 
times  for  alleged  "obscenity". 


196 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Literature   and   morals  in    England.    Nation 

94:205-6  Feb  29,   1912 
RG  '10-14 
McManus,  Patrick  J. 

What      constitutes      obscene      literature? 
Pbysical    Culture    19:125-6    1908 
Minnesota.    Laws,   statutes,   etc. 

Act  protecting  children  under  the  age  of 
eighteen  from  contact  with  certain  con- 
taminating    literature.      Public      Laws, 
Chapter   242.    1917 
PAIS  '17 

Mr  Hall  Caine  banned.  English  Review  15: 
310  Sept,  1913 

Tells    of    library    censorship    against    his:    The 
woman  thou  gavest  me. 
Our    library    censors.    New    York    Tribune 
June  14,  1919 

Gives  information  of  books  suppressed  in  New 
York   and   Brooklyn   public  libraries. 

Parsons,   Elsie   Clews 

Forbidden  stories.  New  Review  3:165  no. 
2 

Poisonous  literature.  Spectator  103:876  Nov 

27.    1909 
RGS  '07-15 
Police     censorship     in     Toronto.      Secular 

Thought   37:147-50  May,   1911 
TS 

Deals  with  case  of  Albert  Britnell  convicted 
of  selling  "Three  weeks"  and  "The  yoke." 

Powell,    B. 

Smith   the   censor.    Free    Review   5:337-51 
Jan,  1896 
TS 

Describes  the  unofficial  censorship  of  British 
news  stands. 

Rawnsley,  Hardwicke  Drummond,  1851- 
Pernicious  literature.  Hibbert  Journal  10: 
462-8  Jan,  1912 
TS  .       . 

Defends    sex-censorship    of    post    and    libraries. 

"Rich,  racy  and  rare."  Anthony  Comstock, 
alias  J.  G.  Phillips,  advertises  a  book 
for  "sports" — a  bad  man  posing  as  a 
Christian  philanthropist  while  he  is  a 
canting  hypocrite  .  .  .  Public  Herald 
April,  1886 

TS 

The  claim  is  that  chief  se.x  censor  was  him- 
self selling  "obscene"  books. 

[Robinson,  William  Josephus] 

Forbidden  book.  Medical  Critic  and  Guide 
22:202-4    Tune,    1919 
TS 

Without  naming  the  book  it  tells  of  the  supj 
pression  by  postal  authorities  of  Maria  C.  Stopes' 
"Married  love." 

Rosenthal,   Ellas 

Theodore  Dreiser's  ''Genius"  damned,  n.d. 
1917  8p 
TS 

Deals  with  the  suppression  of  the  above  book 
by  a  threat  of  prosecution  for  obscenity  and  for 
blasphemy. 

Ross,  Albert 

What     is    immoral     in     literature?     Free- 
thoughtMarch  21,  1891 
TS 

For  general  freedom.  Republished  from 
Arena. 


Sanger,  William  W. 

History      of      prostitution.      New      York, 
Harper  &  brothers  1876  685p 
TS 

"From  its  very  name  is  clearly  indecent  and 
unfit  to  circulate  through  the  mail."  Post  office 
department  suppressing  American  Journal  of  Eu- 
genics for  Nov,   1907. 

Schroeder,  Theodore   Albert,    1864- 

Etiology  and  development  of  our  censor- 
ship of  sex  literature.  Pacific  Medical 
Journal  53:213-22;  279-94  April,  May, 
1910 

TS 

"Obscene'  literature  and  constitutional 
law,  a  foren.sic  defense  of  freedom  of 
the  press.  New  York,  Privately  printed 
for    forensic    uses    1911    439p 


TS 


Argues  that  all  laws  against  "obscene"  liter- 
ature are  unconstitutional. 

"Obscene"  literature  at  common  law.  Al- 
bany  Law   Journal   69:146-9   Mav,    1907 
TS 

Our   censorship    of   literature.    Tomorrow 
4:42-4  Nov,   1908 
TS 

Robert  Ingersoll's  conservatism.  Freeman 
2:498  Feb  2,   1921 

Short  letter  interpreting  Ingersoll  in  terms  of 
emotional  conflict.  Quotes  letter  of  Ingersoll 
critizing  Burns,  Byron  and  Shakespeare.  "You 
cannot  put  genius  enough  with  vulgarity  to  ex- 
cuse the  vulagrity." 

To   the   rescue    of    Clark.    Menace   no.   30 
Nov  11,  1911 
TS 

Unconstitutionality    of    all    laws    against 
"obscene"  literature  asserted  in  a  brief. 
New  York,  Free  speech  league  n.d.  1908 
16p 
TS 

Shaw,    George   Bernard,   and    Corbin,   John 

Author's  apologjf  from  ]\Irs  Warren's  pro- 
fession; with  an  introduction  by  John 
Corbin,  The  tyranny  of  the  police  and 
press.   New  York,   Erentano's   1915  66p 

Shepard,  Richard  B. 

In    the    Supreme    court    of    the     United 
States.   [Richard  B.  Shepard,  petitioner, 
vs.   United   States   of  America,    respon- 
dent.]   [Washington,   D.C.]    n.d.   30p 
This  appeal  was  denied,  1908. 

United  States  circuit  court  of  appeals; 
eighth  district.  [Richard  B.  Shepard, 
plaintiff  in  error,  vs.  United  States  of 
America,  defendant  in  error.]  Trans- 
cript of  record,  n.p.  1906  16Sp 

United  States  circuit  court  of  appeals, 
eighth  circuit.  [Richard  B.  Shepard, 
plaintiff  in  error,  vs.  United  States  of 
America,  defendant  in  error.]  Brief  for 
defendant   in    error,    n.p.,    n.d.    53p 

This  conviction  involved:  The  New  Epicurian, 
or  the  delights  of  sex;  Amorous  adventures  of  a 
Japanese  gentleman;  Boccaccio,  Decameron,  il- 
lustrated edition.  1003-  Acquitted  on:  F.iiiny  Hill. 
See:    Federal   Reporter    1908   for   decision. 


FREE   SPEECH 


197 


United  States  circuit  court  of  appeals, 
eighth  circuit.  [Richard  B.  Shepard. 
plaintiff  in  error,  vs.  United  .States  of 
America,  defendant  in  error.]  Statement 
of  case,  specifications  of  error  and  brief 
of  argument  of  plaintiff  in  error,  n.p., 
n.d.    118p 

For  decision  adverse  to  Shepard  see  Federal 
Reporter  1008.  For  further  information  see 
Transcript  of  record. 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  United  States. 
[Richard  B.  Shepard,  petitioner,  vs. 
United  States  of  America,  respondent.) 
Brief  and  argument  in  support  of  peti- 
tion for  a  writ  of  certiorari  to  be  di- 
rected to  the  United  States  circuit  court 
of  appeals  for  the  eighth  district,  n.p., 
n.d.  99p 

United  States  circuit  court  of  appeals  for 
the  eighth  circuit.  [Richard  B.  Shepard, 
plaintiff  in  error,  vs.  United  States  of 
America,  defendant  in  error.]  Plaintiff 
in  error's  petition  for  a  rehearsing. 
Butte,  Mont.,  McKee  print,  co.,  printer 
n.d.   75p 

SkUl,  L.  J.,  and  King,  J.  C. 

Skill  and  King  were  jailed  for  selling 
famous  classics;  crown  restores  free- 
dom to  men  convicted  of  selling  ob- 
scene books  .  .  .  minister  of  justice  ac- 
quaints House  with  real  reason  for 
granting  pardon  .  .  .  prisoners  had 
served  three  months  when  released. 
Evening  Telegram  April  15,  1910  p26 
TS 

Convicted  for  selling  Balzac,  Petronius,  etc. 
sentenced  to  one  year,  pardoned  because  books 
not  "obscene",  in  opinion  of  Minister  of  Justice 
of  Ontario. 

Stall,    Sylvanus 

Not  a  toothache  or  a  bad  cold  in  the  head. 
Philadelphia,  Vir  pub.  co.  1905  27p 

Suppressed  by  threat  of  prosecution  from  An- 
thony Comstock. 

Steiner,  Franklin 

Genesis  of  Joseph.  Truth  Seeker  44:695 
Nov  3,    1917 

"  Deals  with  the  prosecution  of  editor  of  the 
Twin  City  Reporter,  Twin  City,  Minneapolis, 
for  republishing  thru  the  mails  a  poem  by  "Wil- 
liams'* entitled,  The  ballad  of  Joseph.  For  the 
difficulties  of  this  poem  see:  Schroeder  T.,  Bal- 
lad of  Joseph. 

Purity  laws  vs.  free  press:  "obscenity" 
an  undefined  crime.  Truth  Seeker  4.3: 
150  March  4,  1916;  43:166  March  11. 
1916 

Purity  laws  vs.  free  press:  proceedings 
of  the  Catholic  church  under  the  statute 
in  the  case  of  [Thomas]  Watson.  Truth 
Seeker  43:214  April    1,   1916 

Republished  in  Watson's  Magarine  23:184-7, 
July,  1016.  Tom  Watson  (now  U.S.  Senator) 
was  arrested  for  "obscenity"  in  publishing  trans- 
l.ition  of  Roman  Catholic  literature.  Later  ac- 
quitted. 

Purity  laws  vs.  free  press;  purposes  for 
which  the  Catholic  church  would  avail 
itself  of  this  statute.  Truth  Seeker  43: 
198    March    25,    1916 


Re- 


the 

\V. 


Paris    May    4, 
[Government 


Strachey's    speech    on    demoralizing    litera- 
ture. Spectator   108:147-8  Jan  27,   1912 
RGS   '07-15 
Summer,  John  S. 

Truth  about  literary  lynching.  Dial  71  :62- 
8  July,  1921 

Describes  and  defends  procedure  of  New  York 
Society  for  the  suppression  of  vice,  especially  on 
suppressions    of    the    Little    Review. 

Tennyson,  Charles 

Libraries    censorship.    Contemporary 
view  97:476-80   April,   1910 
RG  '10-14 
Thomas,  John  L[ilburn]   1833- 

Lotteries,    frauds    and    obscenity    in 
mails.   Columbia,    Mo.,    Press  of   E 
Stephens    1900   xviii,358p 
NY    TS 

Abstracts  all  legal  decisions  on  press  censor- 
ship and  reproduces  statutes. 

Umhauer,    Erwin 

Die  bekiimpfung  dcr  schundlitcratur. 
Monatsschrift  fiir  Kriminalpsychol-und 
Strafrechtsrcform    7:585-93    1911 

United  States.  Treaties,  etc.,   1909-1913 
.  .  .    Arrangement    between    the    United 
States  and  other  powers  relative  to  the 
repression  of  the  circulation  of  obscene 
publications.    Signed    at 
1910     ...     Washington 
printing  ofificc]    1911  9p 

LC 

Vizetelly,  Henry 

Extracts  principally  from  English  classics 
showing  that  the  legal  suppression  of 
M  Zola's  novels  would  logically  involve 
the  bowdlerizing  of  some  of  the  great- 
est works  in  English  literature.  London 
1888 

TS 

See  also   Coote,  William  Alexander. 

Volunteer  censorship  of  books  by  circu- 
lating libraries.  Independent  67:1460-1 
Dec  23,  1909 

Y 

Watchet,  H.  Mitchel 

Arrest  and  trial  of  the  editor  fP.ernarr 
Macfadden,  of  Phvsical  Culture.]  Phvs- 
ical   Culture   15:582-4   1906 

Watson,  Edmund  Henry  Lacon,  1865- 
Censorship  of  fiction,  and  some  other  mat- 
ters.  Dial  50:296-8  April   16.   1911 

What  is  obscene.  The  novel.  Hagar  Rcvel- 
Iv.  [United  States  v.  Kennerley,  Fed- 
eral Reporter  209:119]  .\merican  Law 
Review  49:287-8  March,  1915 

ILP  '15 

Wilson,  George  E. 

Victim  of  Comstockism:  beincr  the  history 
of  the  persecution  of  George  E.  Wilson, 
by  the  agent  of  the  western  society  for 
the  suppression  of  vice;  compiled  by 
R.  Frankenstein.  Chicago,  111..  Wilson 
publishing  co.  6-lOOp 


TS 


Discusses  suppression  of  Decameron  of  Boc- 
caccio; Stolen  sweets;  Mysteries  of  the  court  of 
London;  Bel  ami;  Madamoiselle  de  Maupin. 
Wilson  V.  U.S.  in  U.S.  Supreme  court,  April, 
1803;  also  Federal  Reporter  58:76. 


198 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Reformers 

[Arrest  and  conviction  of  Moses  Harman.] 
[Editorial]  To-morrow  Sept,  1905  pl3- 
14 

TS 

Harman  was  editor  of  Lucifer,  a  sex  reform 
paper   and  often  convicted  of   "obscenity". 

Bedborough,  George 

Comstock    rex.    Adult    2:63-5    April,    1898 
TS 

Tells  of  the  U.S.  suppression  of  D.  M.  Ben- 
nett; The  firebrand;  Dr  Kime,  editor  of  the  Iowa 
Medical  Journal;  Emil  Ruedebusch's  "Our  new 
humanity;"  Oswald  Dawson's  "Outcome  of 
IcBitimation." 

Bennett,  De  Robique  Mortimer,  1818-1882 
Eighth  and  last  letter  from  Ludlow  street 
jail,  where  obscenity  is.  (Truth  Seeker 
tracts,  no.  162)   [New  York  1879]  79p 

TS 

Reprinted  from  Truth  Seeker,  Aug.  2,  1879. 
(Truth  Seeker  tracts,  no.  162)  Bennett  was  con- 
victed of  circulating   "obscene"   literature. 

From  behind  the  bars;  a  series  of  letters 
written    in   prison.    New   York,    Liberal 
and  scientific  publishing  house  p.d.  1879 
S65p 
TS 

"Imprisoned  ostensibly  for  depositing  pro- 
hibited matter  in  the  mails,  but  really  for  enter- 
taining and  speaking  his  honest  convictions." 

Ezra  Heywood's  Cupid's  yokes.  Open  letter  to 
Samuel  Colgate,  president  of  the  Society  for 
suppressing  vice;  reprinted  Truth  Seeker,  Feb. 
22,  1879.  Circular  letter  to  publishers.  Against 
the  inquisition;  reprinted  Truth  Seeker,  June  7, 
1879.  Why  sentence  should  not  be  passed  against 
me.  The  sentence;  reprinted  Truth  Seeker, 
June  7,  1879.  Petition  for  pardon  to  President 
Hayes.  Then  follow  editorials  written  from  jail 
with  much  historical  and  academic  discussion  of 
free  speech,  and  critical  comment  on  court  and 
Mr  Comstock,  secretary  of  the  N.Y.  Society  for 
suppression  of  vice. 

Boston.   Citizens 

Proceedings  of  the  indignation  meeting 
held  in  Faneuil  Hall,  Thursday  even- 
ing, August  1,  1878,  to  protest  against 
the  injury  done  to  the  freedom  of  the 
press  by  the  conviction  and  imprison- 
ment of  Ezra  H.  Heywood  .  .  .  Boston, 
B.  R.  Tucker  1878  68p 
LC   NY 

Case  of  Chidley  discussed  in  Parliament: 
inspector-general  to  report.  Daily  Tele- 
graph, Sidney  n.d.  pll 

TS 

Deals  with  the  suppression  of  Chidley's  The 
answer,  and  with  his  arrest  and  sanity. 

Casteel  salty  in  answering  negroes;  tells 
New  York  Association  writers  advocat- 
ing miscegenation  due  no  smypathy. 
Daily  Clarion-Ledger  (Jackson,  Aliss.) 
April   21,   1920 

TS 

Lt.-Gov.  Casteel  justifies  punishment  of  negro 
for  selling  the  Crisis,  and  intimidation  of  his 
lawyer,    which    last    is    disputed. 

Chamberlain,  Edward  W. 

Our  case;  an  opinion  of  the  prosecution 


TS 


from     a     New     York    lawyer.     Pioneer 
Press  18: [1]   Sept  30,  1899 


Deals  with  case  of  Clifford,  J.  R.  See  also 
U.S.  v.  Clifford.  Federal  Reporter  104:296.  De- 
fendant convicted  for  issue  of  Pioneer  Press 
(Martinsburg  W.Va.)  June  3,  1899,  which  inti- 
mated that  a  preacher  and  his  wife  had  both 
committed  adultery.  In  criminal  libel  prosecu- 
tion truth  might  have  been  offered  as  a  defense. 
Not  so   if   "obscenity"   is  charged. 

Our  case.  Letter  no.  2.  Pioneer  Press  18: 
[1]    Oct  7,   1899 
TS 

United  States  v.  Heywood;  why  the  de- 
fendant should  be  released;  Mr  Cham- 
berlain's letter  to  President  Benjamin 
Harrison.  [Also  Judge  Carpenter's 
charge  to  the  jury,  and  an  abstract  of 
the  petition  for  pardon.]  New  York, 
National  defence  association  1891  21p 
TS 

Defendant  convicted  for  Cupid's  Yokes.  See 
also:   Heywood,   Ezra. 

Chidley,  W.  J. 

The    answer.    Melbourne.    Australian    au- 
thor's agency  1911  9-79p 
TS 

First  edition  ordered  burnt.  Revised  edition 
resulted  in  several  more  arrests  and  a  temporary 
incarceration  in  lunatic  asylum.  See:  Case  of 
Chidley   discussed  in   Parliament. 

Clark,  Sam  H.,  and  Crockard,  C.  H. 

United  States  circuit  court  of  appeals, 
eight  district,  no.  4051.  [Sam  H.  Clark 
and  C.  H.  Crockard,  plaintiffs  in  error, 
vs.  The  United  States  of  America,  de- 
fendant in  error.]  .  .  .  Brief  of  plaintiffs 
in  error,  n.p.,  n.d.  221p 
TS 

Obscenity  in  magazine  Jim  Jam  Jems  for 
March  19 12.  Convicted.  For  decision  see:  Fed- 
eral Reporter  211:916. 

United  States  circuit  court  of  appeals, 
eight  circuit.  No.  4051.  [Sam  H.  Clark 
and  C.  H.  Crockard,  plaintiffs  in  error. 
vs.  The  LTnited  States  of  America,  de- 
fendant in  error.]  In  error  to  the  dis- 
trict court  of  the  United  States  for  the 
district  of  North  Dakota.  Transcript  of 
record,    n.p.     1913    140p 

TS 

Clark,    WUliam    Lloyd,    1869- 

Lockhart's  last  journey.  Rail  Splitter  3: 
4   Dec.   1918 

An  appreciation  of  Lockhart,  convicted  of  "ob- 
scenity," because  of  his  opposition  to  romanism, 
it  is  claimed. 
Reminiscences  of  a  reformer's  life;  or, 
Twenty-five  years  on  the  skirrnish  line 
against  political  Romanism.  [!vlilan.  111., 
The  author]  1913  229p 
TS 

Gives  account  of  mobbings  for  anti-Catholic 
lectures;  also  arrest  for  "obscenity"  of  his  book 
"Hell  in  Springfield  tlU.i  at  midnight,  and 
further  arrests  of  himself  and  others. 

Clifford,   J.    R.  „  T 

I  shall  introduce  him.  Pioneer  Press  June 
3.    1899 
TS 

This  reflects  on  the  chastity  of  Rev.  J.  C.  New- 
man, and  thereon  the  author-editor  was  convicted. 
See  U.S.  V.  Clifford.  Federal  Reporter  104:296 


FREE    SPEECH 


199 


Crane,  Jonathan  Mayo,  and  Morton,  James 
Ferdinand,  jr. 

Moses     Harman.     Mother     Earth     5:10-13 
March,  1910 
TS 

Biographical  data  and  appreciation  of  Moses 
Harman,  a  sex-reformer  often  convicted  of  "ob- 
scenity." See  Federal  Reported  34:872;  38:827; 
45:414- 

Dawson,  Oswald 

Millard  and  Thompson  cases.  Adult  2:84- 
7  April,  1898 
TS 

Tells  of  arquitt.il  on  Book  for  women,  and  ju- 
dicial condemnation  of  lantern  slides  of  nude 
women  used  in  lecture  "for  ladies  only." 

Personal  rights  and  sexual  wrongs.  Lon- 
don, Wm.  Reeves  1897  62p 
TS 

Deals  with  Harman  case  and  opposes  sex- 
censorship. 

Democritus,  pseud. 

Corrupting  tlie  morals  of   Her   Majesty's 
subjects.    University    Magazine    10:443- 
47  1898 
Darwin  on  trial  at  the  Old  Bailey.  Uni- 
versity Magazine  11:9-48  1899 
TS 

An  imaginary  trial  promoted  by  and  referring 
to  the  suppression  of  Dr  Havelock  Ellis'  Studies 
in    the   psychology    of   sex. 

Denson,  James  S. 

Popular  follies  and  crimes.   Lucifer.  The 
Light-bearer    1:409-410    1897    (ser.    3) 
Don't  fail   to  read.    (Same  as   Wakeman   et 
al.    Words   of  warning.)    Different   title 
page 
Ellis,   Havelock  Ti?;At-. 

Note   on    the    Bedborough  «a*e.    London, 
University  press  1898  23p 
TS 

A  review  of  the  pamphlet  appeared  in  the 
Adult  2:343.   December,    1898. 

In  the  pamphlet  Dr  Ellis  explains  case  and 
disapproves  of  plea  of  guilty.  Charge  included 
"obscenity"  of  Ellis'  Studies  in  the  psychology 
of  sex.    See:   Bedborough. 

Foote,  Edward  Bond,  jr.,   1854-1912 

Comstock  versus   Craddock.   n.p.,   n.d.  4p 
TS 

Relates  to  fifth  prosecution  of  Ida  Craddock 
for  "obscenity".  See:  Schroeder,  T.  "Obscene" 
literature  and  constitutional  law,  P58-9,  also: 
Craddock,  Ida. 
Sustain  liberty's  defenders  now.  New 
York,  National  defense  association 
(Broadside  1891?) 
TS 

Deals  with  sex-censor.-.hip  in  case  of  Ezra  Hcy- 
wood. 

From  Freethought,  April   it,    1891,  P230. 

Free  press  defence  committee 

An  appeal  to  the  people:  tlie  Bedborough 
case.  Adult  2:189-91  Auc,  1898 
TS 

Appeal  for  defense  money  in  case  arising  from 
.•sale  of  Havelock  Ellis'  Studies  in  the  psychology 
of  sex,  etc. 
Bedborough    case.     London,    The    autlior 
1898  7p 
TS 

Reports,   disapproving  plea  of  guilty. 
Bedborough    case — balance    sheet.    [Lon- 
don? The  author?]    n.d.  8p 
TS 

General  and  financial  report  of  the  Committee. 


Gilmour,  J.   P. 

"Social    purity"    hallucination.    University 
Magazine    (University    press,    London) 
8:177-89   May,    1897 
Hanford,  C.  H. 

Decision  of  Judge   Hanford.  n.p.,  n.d.  2p 
TS 

Opinion  directing  acquittal  of  J.  E.  Larkin  and 
James  W.  Adams  charged  with  sending  "obscene" 
matter  thru  the  mails.     Free  love  discussion. 

Harman,   Lillian 

The   prosecution.    .Adult   2:163   July,    1898 
TS 

Case  of  George  Bedborough  for  selling  Have- 
lock Ellis'  Studies  in  the  psychology  of  sex.  For 
freedom. 

Harman,   Moses,    1830-1916 

Digging  for  bedrock;  campmeeting  talks, 
observations  and  experiences.  Valley 
Falls,  Kan.,  Lucifer  publishing  co. 
[1890]   24p 

Sec:  Federal  Reporter  50:291.  Harman  con- 
victed. 

Persecution  and  the  appreciation,  n.p.  1907 
58p 

Addresses  lauditory  of  Harman  often  convicted 
for  "obscenity"  in  seeking  to  further  sex-re- 
forms and  education. 

Whither  are  we   drifting?   n.d.  4p 
TS 

Republished  from  Lucifer  the  Light  Bearer. 
Deals  with  conditions  in  House  of  representa- 
tives, March  3,  1873,  when  the  "obscenity"  postal 
censorship   bill    was   passed. 

Hawthorne,  Julian 

In  behalf  of  personal  liberty.  (Twentieth 
century  library,  no.  34)  New  York, 
Twentieth  century  publishing  co.  1891 
TS 

Deals  with  persecution  of  Ezra  H.  Heywood 
for  "obscenity".  Also  statement  by  Moses  Har- 
man about  one  of  his  own  similar  prosecutions. 

Reprinted  in  the  Pioneer  Press  i8:ci]  Sept.  9, 
1899. 

Fourteen  pages  of  bibliography  on  scxologic 
subjects. 

Hesrwood,  Angela  F.  T. 

Leaflet  literature.  Princeton,  Mass.,  Word 
office   (Broadside) 

TS 

Howard,   William    Lee 

Havoc  of  prudery;  with  a  plain  and  prac- 
tical suggestion  for  overcoming  the 
most  insidious  enemy  to  the  social  life 
of  this  whole  country.  Pearson's  Mag- 
azine  Nov,    1910  p589-98 

TS 

In  effect  though  not  in  terms  opposing  sex- 
censorship. 

Hurlbut,  E.  P. 

Liberty  of  printing;  an  address  at  second 
annual  congress  of  the  National  liberal 
league,  at  Syracuse,  Oct.  26,  1878.  (Truth 
Seeker  tract  no.   150)   22p 
TS 

Favors  sex-censorship  of  mails.  Answered  by 
Wakeman,   T.   B.   "Comstock  laws." 

Hurt,    Walter 

Moses  Harman.  an  analysis  and  an  ap- 
preciation. To-morrow  April,   1906  p26- 


TS 


Harman    was   often    convicted    of    "obscenity" 
when  advocating  sex  reform. 


200 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Kansas  fight  for  free  press.  The  four  in- 
dicted articles.  Valley  Falls,  Kan.,  Luci- 
fer publishing  co.    lip 

TS 

Case  of  Moses   Harman  and  sex-censorship. 

Kerr,  Dora  F. 

Conversion   of   Mrs   Grundy.   Adult   2:96- 
101   May,   1898 
TS 

Lecture  before  Legitimation  league.  Opposes 
sex-censorship. 

[Larkin,  James   E.   et   al.] 

Decision  of  Judge  Hanford.  Discontent 
4:1    March   26,    1902 

This  opinion  is  republished  in  Schroeder's 
brief  in  the  case  of:  United  States  v.  Coomer, 
Federal    Reporter   213:1. 

Macfadden,  Bernarr 

Is  it  a  crime  to  expose  crime?  Do  crim- 
inals   teach    morality?    n.d.    1907 

Supreme  court  of  the  United  States, 
December  term,  1908.  [Bernarr  Mac- 
fadden, petitioner,  against  the  United 
States  of  America,  respondent.]  Brief 
for  petitioner,  n.p.,  n.d.  54p 

Two  thousand  dollars  fine  and  two  years 
in  the  penitentiarj^.  Physical  Culture 
19:1-2   1908 

Macfadden  prosecution,  a  curious  story  of 
wrongs  and  oppression  under  the  postal 
laws.   n.d.    1908   16p 

TS 

Macfadden  convicted  by  the  U.S.  courts,  of 
"obscenity"  for  contents  of  Physical  Culture 
(magazine.)    See   Federal   Reporter    165:5:. 

McNatt,  John   L. 

Speech  of  John  L.  McNatt,  delivered  to 
the  jury  at  Joplin,  Mo.,  January  14, 
1916,  in  defense  of  the  Menace  and  its 
staff  who  were  charged  with  sending 
obscene  matter  through  the  United 
States  mails.  Menace  no.  251  Feb  12, 
1916 

Editors  of  Menace  were  arrested  and  acquitted 
on  charge  of  "obscenity  in  exposure  of  alleged 
eroticisms  of  Catholic  priests. 

Maeterlinck,  Maurice 

On  the  prosecution  of  "The  Adult."  Adult 
2:202  Aug,  1898 
TS 

Letter  approving  of  Fellis,  by  William  Pratt 
published  in  The  Adult,  Feb.  1898,  p26,  and  de- 
clared "obscene"  in  prosecution  of  George  Bed- 
borough. 

Mrs  Waisbrooker's  case.  Advertiser's  Guide 

Nov,  1894  p7 
TS 

See  also:  Chamberlain,  E.  W.  In  the  midst  of 
wolves. 

Morton,  James   Ferdinand,  jr.,   1870- 

Free  speech  or  slavery.  To-morrow  Nov, 
1905  p48-50 
TS 

Victory!     Discontent     4:[1]      March     19, 
1902 
TS 

Gives  an  account  of  the  trial  and  acquittal  of 
Adams  and  Larkin  for  sending  thru  the  mail  an 
article  on  "Free  love."  For  opinion  see 
Schroeder,  T.,  United  States  Circuit  court  of 
appeals  .  .  .  Homer    Coomer    v.    U.S.A.,    ps- 


Nation,  Carrie 

Hatchet;  magazine.  July  1,  1906 

For  article  ,\  private  talk  to  little  boy?;  Mrs 
Nation  was  indicted  in  United  States  court 
Texas.  Demurrer  sustained,  case  dismissed.  See: 
Schroeder,  T.  "Obscene"  literature  and  consti- 
tutional law,  P64. 

Mrs  Nation  discharged;  well  known 
saloon  smasher  acquitted  by  Coinmis- 
sioner  May;  hearing  was  brief — few 
witnesses  examined — Commissioner  pre- 
sented with  pin  by  defendant.  Hatchet 
Sept  1,  1906  pll 
TS 

This  famous  militant  prohibitionist  was  ar- 
rested for  circulating  her  magazine  the  Hatchet, 
issue  of  July   i,   iqo6.     The  offending  article  was 

entitled  kA  letter  to  little  boys>;  -    ' 

Next  revolution;  or,  Woman's  emancipa- 
tion from  sex  slavery.  Valley  Falls, 
Kan.,  Lucifer  publishing  co.  289  [1889?] 
34p 

TS 

Contains  matter  on  Harman  case  of  postal  sex- 
censorship. 

Next  revolution;  or,  Woman's  emancipa- 
tion from  sex  slavery  (no.  2  [3]).  Val- 
ley Falls,  Kan.,  Lucifer  publishing  co. 
290  [1890]  56p 

TS 

Contains  matter  on  Harman  case.  See  U.S.  v. 
Harman,  Federal  Reporter  34:872;  also  Federal 
Reporter  38:827. 

Next  revolution;  or,  Woman's  emancipa- 
tion from  sex-slavery  (no.  4).  Topeka, 
Kan.,    Lucifer  publishing  co.   1891 

TS 

Contains  prison  letter  from  Moses  Harman, 
and  information  about  arrest  of  Caldwell,  editor 
of  Christian  Life,  and  opposition  to  sex-censor- 
ship. 

Northcote,  Orford 

Ruled  by  the  tomb;  a  discussion  of  free 
thought    and    free    love.    Light    Bearer 
Library  1:1-20  Jan,  1898 
TS 

Gives  account  of  Knowlton's  Fruits  of  phi- 
losophy, on  which  Charles  Watts  was  arrested 
and  plead  guilty.  Then  republished  by  Brad- 
laugh  and  Besant.  Also  gives  account  of  con- 
flicts between  secularists  on  question  of  free 
speech    for     free    love    advocates. 

Nourrison,  Paul 

La  repression  de  la  pornagraphie;  le  droit 
de    poursuite    directe    des    association. 
Reforme  Sociale  62:164-81   1911 
Y 

Noyes,  John  Humphrey 

Male  continence.  Oneida,  The  Oneida 
community    1872    24p 

For  this  Noyes  was  prosecuted  and  convictetd. 
This  report  to  me  has  been  later  questioned. 

Parton,  James,    1822-1891 

Letter  from  ...  (In:  Hurlbut,  E.  P.  Lib- 
erty of  printing,  p62-3) 
TS 

Parton    favors    repeal   of   postal   sex-censorship. 

Pentecost,  Hugh   O. 

A  good  man  sent  to  prison.  [Harman] 
(Twentieth  century  library,  vl  no.  14) 
1890    14p 

TS 

One    of    cases    against    Moses    Harman. 


FREE   SPEECH 


201 


Persecution  and  the  appreciation:  brief  ac- 
count of  the  trials  and  imprisonment 
of  Moses  Harnian,  because  of  his  ad- 
vocacy of  the  freedom  of  women  from 
sexual  enslavement  and  of  the  right  of 
children  to  be  born  well;  together  with 
an  account  of  the  public  reception  given 
to  him  on  his  release  from  prison. 
[Chicago,  Lucifer,  the  Light  Bearer] 
n.d.    [1907] 

Persecution  of  Moses  Harman.  Our  Xew 
Humanity  1:    5p  Sept,  1895 

TS 

Reprinted  from   the  Advertiser's  Guide. 

Pillsbury,    Parker 

"Cupid's  yokes"  and  the  Holy  Scriptures 
contrasted  in  a  letter  from  Parker  Pills- 
bury  to  Ezra  H.  Heywood.  Princeton, 
Mass.  Cooperative  publishing  co.  n.d. 
[1878]  14p 
TS 

Heywood  was  arrested  for  vending  Cupid's 
yokes  as  "obscene."  Hence  this  contrast  as  a 
defence. 

Piatt,  WUliam 

The  "Chronicle"  and  the  unthinking.  Adult 
2:325-7  Dec,  1898 
TS 

Criticises  sex-censorship  and  suppression  of 
Havelock  Ellis'  Studies  in  psychology  of  sex  in 
case  of  George  Bedborough. 

Free   speech.    Adult   2:172-5   July,    1898 
TS 

"Brilliant"   and  light. 

In    defence    of    free    discussion.    Adult   2: 
292-3  Nov,  1898 
TS 

Criticises  prosecution  of  George  Bedborough 
for  selling  Havelock  Ellis'  Studies  in  psychology 
of  sex. 

Worship    of    ignorance.    Adult    2:197-200 
Aug,  1898 
TS 

Opposes  sex-censorship. 

Post,  Louis  F. 

Advance     of    despotism     in     the     United 
States:    free    speech    and    good    order. 
Arena  40:72-4  July,   1908 
Y 

American  postal  censorship.  Government 
2:27-34  Oct.   1907 
TS 

Opposes  postal   sex-censorship. 
Our   despotic   postal    censorship.    n.p.,n.d. 

TS  ~ 

Reprinted  from  the  Public,  March  lo,  1506. 
Same  article  also  reprinted  in  Lucifer  the  Light 
Bearer,  March  29,    1906,  P485-7,  49i-2>    ■ 

Opposes  postal  sex-censorship. 

Proceedings  and  addresses  at  the  Free- 
thinker's convention  held  at  Watkins, 
N.Y..  August  22d,  23d.  24th,  and  25th. 
78.  New  York,  D.  M.  Bennett,  liberal 
publisher  1878  398p 

TS 

During  convention.  D.  M.  Bennett,  \V.  S.  Bell 
and  Josephine  S.  Tilton  were  arrested  for  sell- 
ing Ezra  Heywood's  "Cupid's  Yokes".  Resolu- 
tion demanding  repeal  of  sex-censorship  laws 
were  adopted,  20-5.  Much  of  the  discussion 
hinged  about   freedom   of  speech. 


Report  of  the  Chicago  vice  commission  de- 
barred from  the  mails.  Living  Church 
45:764-5   Oct   7,    1911 

TS 

Robinson,  William  Josephus 
Story   of    Rose   and    Edward.    Altruria  3: 
20-2   Feb,    1908 
TS 

This  number  of  the  magazine  (Altruria)  was 
suppressed  because  of  the  "obscenity"  of  the 
story. 

Rockhill,   Sarah    Stone,   and   others 

Imperialism;    robbery;    obscenity;    false- 
hood. n.p.,n.d.  2p 
TS 

Republished  from  Lucifer.  Opposes  postal 
sex-censorship. 

Ruedebusch,   Emil   F. 

Old  and  the  new  ideal;  a  solution  of  that 
part  of  the  social  question  which  per- 
tains to  love,  marriage  and  sexual  in- 
tercourse. Mayville,  Wis.,  The  author 
1896  347p 

TS 

tor  mailing  this  book  the  author  was  con- 
victed and  fined  in  federal  court. 

Saunders,  W.   C. 

Tom  Watson  marked.  Down  Homer  6:1- 
7  July,   1912 

Tells  of  Watson's  arrest  for  "obscene"  criti- 
cism  of  Catholicism.      Was  never  convicted. 

Seymour,  Henry 

Literary   "hall-mark"   of   the    Old    Bailey, 
Adult  2:323-5   Dec.   1898 
TS 

Suggested  by  Bedbourgh  case  and  opposes  sex- 
censorship. 

Sheppard,  J.  I. 

Speech  of  J.  I.  Sheppard  delivered  to  the 
jury  at  Joplin,  Mo.,  January  14,  1916. 
in  defense  of  The  Menace  and  its  staff, 
who  were  charged  with  sending  obscene 
matter  through  the  United  States  mails. 
Menace  no.  251   Feb   12,   1916 

The  accused  publications  were  attacks  upon  the 
Catholic  priests  and  nuns.     Defendants  acquitted. 

Should  the  press  be  censored?  Goodwin's 
Weekly    19:1    Aug    19,    1911 

The  question  is  answered  with  a  hesitating 
"yes"    and    the    argument    is   based    on    materials 

of     Mormon     controversy. 

Stewart,   Lucy 

What  do  the  censors  want?  Adult  2:232-4 
Sept,  1898 
TS 

Criticises  suppression  of  the  Adult. 

To  define  obscenity.  Truth  Seeker  3i:676- 
7  Oct  27,   1906 

Lonij  editorial  on  meeting  of  National  purity 
federation. 

Toledo  Sun.  WoodhuU   &  Claflin's  Weekly 

Aug  14,  1875 
TS 

Gives  account  of  arrest  of  John  A.  Lant  for 
"obscenity"  of  an  article  by  George  Francis 
Train  quoting  Bible.  See:  Schroeder,  T.  Obscene 
literature  p6s,  309-10. 


202 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Tom   Watson.    Railsplitter   3:2   and   4    Dec, 
1918 

Reprinted  from  Primitive  Baptist,  Martin, 
Tenn. 

Gives  an  account  of  Watson's  cases  and  ex- 
tracts of  his  speech.  He  was  prosecuted  and 
acquitted    of   "obscenity"    in    exposing    romanism. 

Train,    George    Francis 

To     postmaster     Pearson.     Geo.     Francis 
Train's  Paper  Feb  22,  1884  p5 
TS 

Correspondence  about  admissibility  of  his  pa- 
per to  mails.  As  to  his  arrest  see  Schroeder,  T. 
"  'Obscene'  literature  and  constitutional  law," 
p65,   309-10. 

Waisbrooker,  Lois 

Bible  truth  bursting  its  shell  that  it  may 
express  its  larger  meaning,  also  that 
hundred  dollar  article,  n.p.,  n.d.  39p 

TS 

"That  hundred  dollar  article,"  was  also  re- 
printed in  a  broadside.  This  is  the  republication 
of  article  on  which  she  was  convicted  for  "ob- 
scenity". 

Great  conspiracy.   To-morrow   Sept,    1906 
68-72 
TS 

Criticises  postal  censorship  in  relation  to  rad- 
ical   sex   and   industrial    reformers. 

Wakeman,  Thaddeus  Burr.  1834-1913 

Administrative  process  of  the  postal  de- 
partment; a  letter  to  the  president,  n.p. 
1901    16p. 

Comstock  A  law  unconstitutional;  plain 
duty  of  all  citizens,   [n.p.   187|?]    52p 

Comstock  laws  considered  as  to  their 
constitutionality;  being  .  .  .  Faneuil 
Hall  speech,  .  Replies  to  The  Index, 
Judge  E.  P.  Hurlbut's  Liberty  of  print- 
ing, Mr  Wakeman's  reply,  the  laws  in 
question  various  letters  from  eminent 
men,  etc.  New  York,  D.  M.  Bennett, 
Liberal  publisher  n.d.  [1881?]  44p 
TS 

Liberty  and  purity  .  .  .  and  address  be- 
fore the  Committee  on  charitable  and 
religious  societies  of  the  Assembly  of 
the  state  of  New  York  in  opposition 
to  a  bill  to  largely  increase  the  crim- 
inal jurisdiction  and  powers  of  the  So- 
ciety for  the  suppression  of  vice,  March 
23,  1881.  New  York,  Liberal  publish- 
ing CO.  1881  92p 
TS 

— and   Ingersoll,   Robert  G. 

[Debate  before  the  American  Secular 
union?  on  obsccnitv  laws.]  Man  [Mag- 
azine]   Nov    1,    1880 

— and  others 

Words  of  warning  to  those  who  aid  and 
abet  in  the  suppression  of  free  speech 
and  free  press,  n.p.  1879  60p 

Walker,  Edwin  Cox,   1849- 

An    immigration    bureau    outrage.    Adult 
2:301-4  Nov.   1898 
TS 

Criticises  exclusion  from  America  of  a  wo- 
man not  a  prostitute  who  believed  in  freedom  of 
love  and  acted  upon  it  openly. 


Who  is  the  enemy;  Anthony  Comstock 
or  you?  New  York,  The  author  1903  63p 

Warren,   Mortimer 

Almost  fourteen;  a  book  designed  as  a 
gift  from  parents  to  their  sons  and 
daughters  after  those  sons  and  daugh- 
ters have  passed  the  age  of  seven,  and 
before  they  reach  the  age  of  fourteen. 
New  York,  Dodd,  Mead  &  co.  1892 
154p 

Suppressed.  See:  Schroeder,  T.  "Obscene" 
literature,  P63-4,  For  republishing  this  Albert 
F.  Hunt  of  Newburyport,  Mass.,  lost  his  position 
as  a  teacher. 

Watson,  Thomas  E.,  1865- 

Attorney  general  does  not  realize  the 
lawlessness  of  his  threatened  proceed- 
ings against  Watson.  Watson's  Maga- 
zine 22:302-7  April,    1916 

Deals  with  the  effort  to  prosecute  Watson  out- 
side the  jurisdiction  where  his  magazine  is  pub- 
lished. 

How  the  liberty  of  the  press  is  attacked 
in  the  Watson  case.  Jefifersonian  12:1- 
4  Dec  9.  1915 

Gives  considerable  information  of  happenings 
behind  the  scene  and  extra  legal  motives  for 
prosecuting  Watson  on  "obscene"  exposure  of 
Catholic  confessional. 

Ofificial  record  of  case  of  United  States 
V.  Thomas  E.  Watson.  Watson's  Mag- 
azine 22:111-68  1916 

Watson  was  indicted  for  sending  "obscenity" 
by  mail,  which  consisted  of  quotations  from  Cath- 
olic  theologians.      The   jury   disagreed. 

Opening  speech  to  the  jury  of  Mr  Wat- 
son; what  defense  is;  says  he  took  up, 
in  his  drastic  Roman  Catholic  hierarchy 
great  points  for  democratic  and  Prot- 
estant points  of  view  against  mon- 
archical and  hierarchical  points  of  view. 
Jefifersonian  12:1   Dec  2,  1915 

Watson  was  being  tried  and  was  ultimately  ac- 
quitted on  charge  of  "obscene"  exposure  of 
Catholic  confessional. 

Roman  Catholic  hierarchy;  the  deadliest 
menace  to  American  liberties  and  Chris- 
tion  civilization.  Thomson,  Ga.,  Jefifer- 
sonian  publishing    co.    1912   267p 

TS 

Contains  material  on  which  was  based  Wat- 
son's trials  for  sending  "obscenity"  thru  the 
mails.     He  was  acquitted. 

What  constitutes  an  indecent  publication? 
Central  Law  Journal  65:64-9  July  26, 
1907 

What  constitutes  "indecent"  publication. 
Interpretation  of  section  317  of  the 
penal  code.  Court  of  appeals;  decided 
May  21,  1907.  [The  people  of  the 
state  of  New  York,  appellant  v.  New- 
ton L.  A.  Eastman,  respondent.]  New 
York  Law  Journal  37:1009  June  7,  1907 

TS 

For  same  decision  see  People  v.  Eastman,  New 
York  Reports  188:478;  North  Eastern  Reporter 
81:459.  Deals  with  Catholic  confessional.  Ar- 
ticle entitled  "An  open  door  to  hell,"  published 
in   The   Gospel   Worker.      Held   not   criminal. 


FREE    SPEECH 


203 


Wickes,  Edward  Zeus  Franklin 

Alpha  and  Omega  .  .  .  Plea  for  liberty, 
the  divine  right  of  man,  freedom  of 
person,  pen,  press  and  mail  .  .  .  Ar- 
rest, trial,  and  complete  vindication  of 
Dr  E.  Z.  Franklin  .  .  .  New  York  and 
Boston,  Mutual  benefit  publishing  co. 
1884  112p 
LC 

Free  speech,  press,  and  mails,  the  divine 
right  of  man;  plea  for  light,  liberty, 
purity,  and  justice;  Satan  in  society, 
his  modern  inquisition  exposed;  per- 
secution, cruelty,  and  crime  ...  by  Dr 
E.  Z.  Franklin  .  .  .  New  York  and  Bos- 
ton. Mutual  benefit  publishing  co.  cl884 
188p 

LC 

Illustrated  domestic  medical  counsellor; 
laws  and  science  of  life,  health  and  self- 
preservation  .  .  .  Boston,  Mutual  bene- 
fit publishing  co.   1884  5v  in   1 

LC 

Contains:  Plea  for  liberty,  the  divine  right 
of  man,  and  Free  speech,  press,  and  mails. 

Wilson,  J.  B. 

Powerful   plea   for  liberty.   Pioneer   Press 
18:[1]   Oct  13,   1899 
TS 

Deals  with  case  of  Clifford,  J.  R.  Also  U.S.  v. 
Clifford.  Federal   Reporter   104:296. 

Wright,  Elizur 

Free    speech;    [an    address.]    Index    Aug 
15.   1878  p393 
TS 

Speech  at  Faneuil  Hall  (Boston)  meeting  Aug. 
1,  1878,  in  the  interest  of  Ezra  H.  Hey  wood  ar- 
rested for  vending  Cupid's  Yokes,  alleged  to  be 
"obscene". 

Scientific  and  Medical 

AUbutt,   Henry  Arthur 

Trial  of  .  .  .,  by  the  general  medical  coun- 
cil of  Great  Britain  and  Ireland,  at 
299.  Oxford  Street.  London,  on  No- 
vember 23rd.  24th.  and  25th.  1887.  for 
the  publication  of  "The  wife  s  hand- 
-  book"  at  so  low  a  price;  with  press 
criticisins  on  the  same  letter  from  Mr 
Joseph  Latchinore,  of  Leeds,  to  Sir 
Henry  W.  Acland.  Stanninglev.  T.  W. 
Birdsall  1887  31p 
TS 

Anatomy  out  of  gear;  four  museums  turned 
inside  out  by  Comstock  and  the  police. 
New  York  Herald  Jan   10.   1888 

TS 

Tells  of  raid  on  anatomical  museums  where 
sexual  diseases  were  illustrated.  Discussed  at 
Medico   Legal  society. 

[Bedborough,  George] 

Police  and  the  press:  Scotland  Yard  cen- 
sorship. Review  of  Reviews  18:162  Aug 
15.   1898 
TS 

Bedborough  was  arrested  for  selling  Havclock 
Ellis'  Studies  in  the  psychology  of  sex.  A  fi- 
nancial backer  of  the  publications  of  the  Univer- 
sity Magazine  had  a  skeleton  in  his  closet.  For 
his  protection  Bedborough  ultimately  pleads 
guilty. 


Barrier,    Leroy 

Judicial  crimes.  Light  of  Truth— 1898  plO 
TS 

Ik'rriiT  here  criticises  the  "obscenity"  laws 
under  which  he  was  convicted. 

Bogart,   G.   Henri 

One  bane  of  prudery.  Medicine  Times  31: 
341-6    Feb.    1912 
TS 

Sex-censorship   and   eugenics. 

Caldwell,   J.    B. 

Statement.   Christian   Life  3:19-22  Nov  6, 
1890 
TS 

Arrested  for  obscenity  in  advocating  "coition 
for  offspring  only"  and  for  printing  on  June- 
.Sept.  issue  of  Christian  Life,  a  defense  of  Moses 
Harman,   a   sex-reformer. 

Chidley,  William  James 

The     answer;     \V.    J.     Chidley's    appeal; 
magistrate's  action  upheld;  chief  justice 
dissents.   Sydney  Sun  Apr  3,   1914 
TS 

Book      challenged;      court      proceedings; 
bench    orders    destruction.     Melbourne 
(Australia)  Herald  Oct  7,  1911 
TS 

Gives  an  account  of  cases  involving  Chidley's 
The  Answer.  One  pleads  guilty.  Other  judg- 
ment reserved. 

Book   challenged:    order   for   destruction; 
novel  method  of  advertising.  Melbourne 
(Australia)    Herald  n.d. 
TS 

Chidley  and  other  are  declared  guilty  of  "ob- 
scenity"   on    The   Answer. 

Chivied  Chidley;  his  immurement  as  in- 
sane; he  describes  his  Callan  Park  ex- 
periences; cries  of  souls  in  grievous 
agony.  Truth;  the  People's  Paper  Sept 
21.  1913 
TS 

Tells  of  temporary  incarceration  to  investi- 
gate his  sanity  for  writing  The  Answer.  Re- 
leased from  asylum  and.  later  arrested  and  given 
three  months  in  jail  for  The  Answer. 

Chidley  again;  attack  on  social  conditions; 

■'married    persons    criminals."    July    2, 

[1914?] 
TS 

After  a  lecture  on  sex,  Chidley  took  up  a  col- 
lection. The  lecture  not  being  "obscene"  he 
was  sentenced  for  begging. 

Holy  horror.  (In:  Lum  Smith  the  Phila- 
delphia crank  and  notorious  swindler  of 
advertisers.  pl7  Buffalo.  N.Y  World's 
dispensary   printing   office    n.d.) 

TS 

Smith  an  eccentric  on  the  borderland  of  in- 
sanity had  attacked  as  "obscene"  some  medical 
advertising  of  Dr  Pierce,  and  this  is  the  reply. 

Hunt.  Albert  F. 

Arrested!  The  Item's  editor  the  victim 
of  political  rings  and  newspaper  en- 
emies. .  .  .  The  book  which  we  pub- 
lish in  chapters  is  on  the  shelves  of  the 
Baptist  church  .  .  .  Newburyport  Item 
Aug  7,  1897 

TS 

Alleges  att.icks  upon  political  grafter  to  be 
real  motive  for  arrest  on  "obscenity"  of  9th 
chapter  of  Almost  fourteen,  by  Mortimer 
Warren. 


204 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Hunt,  Albert  F.  —Continued 

Prosecution!  Persecution!  Malignity!  The 
whys  and   wherefores  of  a   bitter   fight. 
Newburyport  Item  Aug   14,    1897 
TS 

Tells  of  arrest  and  asserts  that  Almost  four- 
teen would  not  have  been  called  "obscene"  ex- 
cept for  editor's  criticism  of  corruption  of  police 
and    city    administration    of    Newburyport,    Mass. 

Judex,   pseud. 

De     quelques     condamnations     litteraires 
a  propos  d'un   livre  sur  la  flagellation. 
Paris,  C.  Carrington   1902  99p 
B 
Justitia,  pseud. 

Survival  of  the   Inquisition.   Adult  2:329- 
30  Dec.  1898 
TS 

Defends  Havelock  Ellis'  Studies  in  psychology 
of  sex,  against  suppression  in  case  of  George 
Bedborough. 

Kime,    John   W. 

Unjust  Kime  prosecution,  Edward  W. 
Chamberlain.  (Clipping  perhaps  from: 
The  Cresset  or  other  college  publica- 
tion about  Feb,   1898.) 

Convicted  on  contents  of  Iowa  Medical  Journal 
(Des  Moines)  issue  of  March,  1897. 

Abstracted  in:  Schroeder,  T.  "Obscene"  liter- 
ature and  constitutional  law,  p6g. 

Krauss,  Friedrich 

Erotsche  zauberwahnprozesse  zu  Berlin 
im  jahre  1913;  beitrage  zur  geschichte 
der  anthopophyteria-studien  in  Deutsch- 
land.  Leipzig,  Ethnologischer  verlag 
1913   69p 

TS 

Landis,   Simon   M. 

Full  account  of  the  trial  of  Simon  M. 
Landis,  M.D.  for  uttering  and  publish- 
ing a  book  entitled  Secrets  of  genera- 
tion. Philadelphia,  First  progressive 
Christian  church  [1870]   76p 

TS 

For  decision  see:  Commonwealth  v.  Landis. 
Philadelphia  Reports  8:453. 

Lewis,  Denslow 

Practical     prophylaxis.     Medical     Record 
72:594-600   Oct   12,   1907 
TS 

Gives  account  of  various  acts  of  sex  censorship 
and  opposes  all  such. 

Malchow,  C[harles]   Wfilliam] 

Sexual  life;  a  scientific  treatise  designed 
for  advanced  students  and  the  profes- 
sors. Minneapolis,  Minn.,  The  Burton 
CO.   1904  308p 

This  book  resulted  in  the  conviction  of  its  au- 
thor as  a  criminal.  See:  Schroeder,  T.  "Obscene" 
literature  and  constitutional  law. 

Marcuse,   Julian 

Untcrdriickung     der     schutzmittel     durch 
gesetzgebung  und  rechtsprechung.  Zeit- 
schrift  fiir  bckampfung  der  Geschlechts- 
krankheiten    13:160-91    1911 
Moens,  Herman  M.  Bernelot 

Intermixture    of    races.     Medical     Review 
of  Reviews  25:531-43   Sept.  1920 
TS 

Some  of  the  pictures  reproduced  with  black 
bands  across  the  genitalia  are  the  same  as  those 
upon  which  this  author  was  convicted.  See:  Shu- 
fcldt,  R.  W. 


Three    black    bands.    Medical    Review    of 
Reviews  25:719-23   Dec,   1920 
TS 

Refers  to  his  own  prosecution  and  other  legal- 
ized pruderies.  Lists  prominant  persons  who 
certify  to  the  scientific  and  artistic  value  of  the 
suppressed   photographs. 

Morton,  James  F[erdinand]  jr.,  1870- 

Why  "an  act  to  prohibit  advertisements 
concerning  certain  diseases"  should  not 
be  reported  favorably  nor  passed. 
[Brief   for  argument]    7p 

TS 

Obscene   literature   and  pictures.   American 
Journal    of    Dermatology    15:442 

Editorial  telling  of  suppression  of  the  issue 
of  the  same  magazine  for  June  19 ii,  on  account 
of  an  illustrated  article  by  Dr  W.  P.  Carr  on 
scrotal  surgery.  Page  424  has  a  review  by  Shu- 
feldt  of  Obscene  literature  and  constitutional  law. 

Pankhurst,   Christabel 

Plain  facts  about  a  great  evil.  New  York, 
Sociological    fund    of    the    Medical    re- 
view  of   reviews    1913    157p 
— Same.   London,  David   Nutt   1913   156p 
TS 

Was  suppressed  for  "obscenity." 

Schroeder,    Theodore    Albert,    1864- 

Protest  of  the  Free  speech  league  against 
the  passage  of  senate  bill  no.  1790,  as- 
sembly bill  no.  650,  New  York  legis- 
lature, 1911,  which  proposes  to  penalize 
certain  medical  advertising  and  intelli- 
gence. New  York,  Free  speech  league 
1911  12p 

TS 

Seymour,    Henry 

Our    conventional    virtue.    Adult   2:289-91 
Nov,  1898 
TS 

Inspired   by   opposition    to    the    prosecution    of 
George    Bedborough    for    selling    Havelock    Ellis' 
Studies  in  psychology  of  sex. 
To    the   breech    freemen!    Adult    2:157-60 
July,  1898 
TS 

Tells  of  arrest  of  George  Bedborough  for  sale 
of  Havelock  Ellis'  Studies  in  the  psychology  of 
sex. 

Shaw,  George  Bernard 

Prosecution  of  Mr  Bedborough.  Adult  2: 
230-1    Sept,    1898 
TS 

For  selling  Havelock  Ellis'  Studies  in  psychol- 
ogy  of   sex. 

Shufeldt,   Robert  WUson,   1850- 

Enemies  of  art  and  literature  in  America. 
Boston  Investigator  69:2  March  3,  1900 
A   general    dissertation   on   the   attacks   of   the 
purists,  the  post  office  department,  and  the  courts, 
on  the  scientific  works  and  art  pictures  wherein 
nudity  of  the  human  form  plays  a  part. 
Enemies    of    art,    sculpture    and    anatomy 
in  the  law  courts  of  Washington,  D.C. 
Medical   Review   of  Reviews  25:599-604 
Oct,    1919 
TS 

An  adverse  criticism  of  the  trial  of  Professor 
N  M  B.  Moens.  A  man  of  science,  who  was 
fined  and  sentenced  to  prison  for  having  in  his 
possession  a  series  of  anthropological  photographs 
of  women  half-bloods,  which  were  to  illustrate 
a  work  on  the  subject  upon  which  he  was  at  tue 
time    engaged. 


FREE    SPEECH 


205 


On   the   exhibition   of   the   organs   of   sex 
in  medical  museums  open  to  the  public. 
Medical    Review    of    Reviews    25:211-17 
April,  1919 
TS 

This  article  was  prompted  by  the  custom  of 
draping  or  putting  out  of  sight  altogether  any 
models  that  in  any  way  illustrate  the  sexual  or- 
gans of  man  or  other  animals  in  the  exhibition 
cases  of  the  Army  Medical  museum.  Also  men- 
tions without  naming  him  the  arrest  of  Professor 
N.  M.   B.   Mocns. 

Suppression  of  the  literature  of  human 
topographical  anatomy  in  this  country. 
Pacific  Medical  Journal  52:146-53  March, 
1909 

Opposes  sex  censorship,  citing  medical  books 
for  which  the  publishers  may  be  punished,  as 
Flint's  "Text  book  of  physiology"  (ed.  1876), 
and   many   others. 

Where  the  impurists  would  lead  us. 
Pacific  Medical  Journal  55:402-U9  July, 
1912 

A  summing-up  of  the  battles  won  by  science 
over  superstition  and  defends  intellectual  free- 
dom for  all,  and  facts  of  sexology  for  the  gen- 
eral use  of  the  public. 

Thompson,  W.  M. 

Liberty  of  the  press;  home  office  prose- 
cution; the  new  censorship.  Reynolds's 
Newspaper.  Sept  11,  1898  pi 
TS 

Very  long  editorial  disapproving  of  the  prose- 
cution of  George  Bedborough  for  selling  Have- 
lock   Ellis'  Studies  in  the  psychology  of  sex. 

Who   is   the   offender?   Winona   Republican 

45:  [2]  April  2,  1898 
TS 

Theater 

Bartholomew.  Robert  O. 

Report  of  censorship  of  moving  pictures 
arid  of  investigation  of  motion  picture 
theaters  of  Cleveland,  1913.  Cleveland, 
O.,  City  council  1913  32p 

TS 

Holds  censorship  necessary. 

Bellows,    Henry   Whitney,    1814-1882 

.  .  .  Address  upon  the  claims  of  the 
drama,  delivered  before  the  president 
and  members  of  the  American  dramatic 
fund  society,  1857  .  .  .;  with  an  intro- 
duction by  J.  B.  Buckstonc.  London 
[1857]    29p 

Y 

Relation  of  public  atnusements  to  public 
morality,  especially  of  the  theatre  to 
the  highest  interests  of  humanitv:  an 
address.  New  York  1857  53p 


Black,  Hugh,   1868- 

Free    speech    v.    censorship.    Everybodvs 
Magazine  26:114-16  Jan,   1912 
RG  '10-14 

Bostwick,   Andrew   Linn 

Censorship   of  moving  picture   films.   Na- 
tional Municipal    Review  2:332-3  April. 
1913 
RGS   '07-15 


Censor's  model  rules  for  cinema  films. 
Solicitor's  Journal  and  Weekly  Re- 
porter 61:60-1    Nov    11,   1916 

ILP   '16 

Censorship  of  moving  picture  plays.  .Amer- 
ican Playwright  3:242-4  July,  1914 
AMI    '14 

Censorship  of  plays.  Quarterly  Review  no. 

213:352-76   1910 
Y 

Censorship  of  the  plays.  Theatre  14:       1889 
Censoring     the     movies.     Public     17:579-90 

June  19,  1914 
AMI   '14 

Censorship  of  moving  picture  films  as  an 
interference  with  the  freedom  of  the 
press.  [Note  to  Mutual  film  co.  v.  In- 
dustrial commission  of  Ohio,  Federal 
Reporter  215:138]  Virginia  Law  Review 
2:216-18  Dec,   1914 

ILP  '14 

[Censorship  of  the  stage.]  Blackwood's 
Magazine    186:852-6   1909 

Y 

Chicago  movie  censorship,  il  Literary  Di- 
gest 48:702-3  March  28,   1914 

RG     10-14 

Cocks,  Orrin  Giddings,  1877- 

Applying    standards     to     motion    picture 
films.  Survey  32:337-8  June  27,   1914 
RG    '10-14 

Coryell,  John  R.  (Grant,  Margaret,  pseud.) 
Indecency    on    the    stage.    Mother    Earth 
4:24-8  March,   1909 

A   dialogue  ridiculing  sex-censorship. 

Craies,  W.  F. 

Censorship    of    stage    plays.    Society    of 
Comparative   Legislation  Journal  ns  8: 
196-202   1907 
Y 

Crane.  Frank,  1861- 

The  lure.  Forum  51:115-18  Jan,  1914 

Dale,  Alan 

Dramatic  censors  and  some  new  plays. 
Cosmopolitan    Magazine   47:74-80   1909 

Y 

Dell,  Floyd 

Morality  and  the  movies.  New  Review 
3:190-1    Aug,   1915 

Demoralizing  plays.  Outlook  105:110  Sept 
20,  1913 

RG  '10-14 

Dickinson.  Thomas  Herbert,   1877- 

Theory  and  practice  of  the  censorship. 
Drama   no    18:248-61    May,    1915 

RGS   '07-15 

Dimnet.   Ernest,   1869- 

Morals  of  French  plays.  Nmeteenth  Cen- 
tury 73:564-79  March.  1913;  Same.  Liv- 
ing Age  277:347-59  May  10.  1913 

RG    '10-14 

Dramatic  itnmorality  denied  and  affirmed_ 
Literary  Digest  54:705-6  March  17,  1917 

RG  '17 


206 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Dramatizing  vice.   Literary  Digest  47:577-8 

Oct  4.  1913 
RG  '10-14 

Examining    the     examiner.     Nation     89:147 

Aug   12,   1909 
Y 

Review  of  the  testimony  of  George  A.  Red- 
ford,  examiner  of  plays  in  England,  before  the 
joint  Committee  of  lords  and  commons  on  the 
censorship. 

Filth  on   the  stage.   Nation  97:246  Sept   11, 

1913 
RG   '10-14 

Fitz- Gerald,   W.    G. 

Dramatic  censorship  in  England.  Harper's 
Weekly  51:947  1907 
Y 

Ford,   James   Lauren.    1854- 

Plea  for  the  free  theater.  Munsey's  Alag- 
azine  28:148-52   Oct,    1902 
Y 

Freedom  of  speech  and  boards  of  censors 
for  motion  picture  shows.  [Mutual  film 
corporation  v.  Industrial  commission. 
Supreme  Court  Decisions  35:387.]  [Ed- 
itorial] Central  Law  Journal  80:307-8 
April  23,  1915;  Columbia  Law  Review 
15:546  June,  1915;  National  Corporation 
Reporter   50:737  June    10,    1915 

ILP  '15 

G.,  M.   G. 

Stage  censor;  an  historical  sketch:   1544- 
1907.  London  1908  128p 
Y 

Hess,  Gabriel  L. 

Censoring   the    movie.    New   York   Times 
69:section  8:11   Dec  28,  1919 
TS 

Superficial  two  column  discussion  arguing  that 
moving  pictures  should  be  as  free  as  newspapers 
and  other  theatres. 

Howe,   F.   C. 

Shall    the    motion    picture    show    be    cen- 
sored? Outlook  107:412-16  June  20,  1914 
AMI    '14 

Impropriety  in  plays  and  revues;  a  warning 

by    the    Lord    Chamberlain.    Justice    of 

the  Peace  79:236  May  15,  1915 
ILP  '15 
Kliefeld,   Kurt 

Theaterzensur  in  Preussen.  Berlin,  Strup- 

pe   &  Winckler  1905  72p 
NY 
Krais,  E, 

Tiber  theaterzensur;  vom  standpunkte  des 

zensors.   Gesellschaft   1:7-14 
Y 
McGuire.  W.  D.,  jr. 

Censoring  motion  pictures.  New  Republic 

2:262-3  April    10,   1915 
RG   '15 
Moving  picture  censorship.  Law  Notes  18: 

122  Oct,  1914 
ILP    14 
No  censorship.  Independent  11  ■Ail-'i  March 

30.    1914 
RG  '10-14 


Passed  by  the  national  board  of  censorship. 
Review   of   Reviews   50:730-1    Dec,   1914 
RG  '10-14 

Post-cards   and    movies    censored.    Literary 

Digest   50:1275-6   May   29,    1915 
RG  '15 

Schroeder,     Theodore     Albert     1864-,     and 
Sumner,  John  S. 

Should   the   movies  be   censored?   Surely, 
says  vice-suppression  chief.  Why?  asks 
free  speech  advocate.  New  York  World, 
Editorial   section  :1   April   3,    1921 
TS 

Stoker,   Bram    (Abraham) 

Censorship    of    stage    plavs.     Nineteenth 
Century  66:974-89   Dec,    1909 

Tree,   Viola 

Censorship    of    stage    plays.     Nineteenth 
Century  67:164-72    1910 
Y 

Tridon,  Andre 

"Damaged    goods."    New    Review    1:382-4 
March  22,   1913 
TS 

Gives  review  of  play  which  because  of  censor- 
ship could  not  be  given  in  theatre  open  to  gen- 
eral public. 

Twentieth    century    club,    Boston.    Drama 
committee 

Amusement  situation  in  the  city  of  Bos- 
ton; based  on  a  study  of  the  theatres 
for  ten  weeks,  from  November  28,  1909, 
to  February  5,  1910  .  .  .  Being  a  report 
prepared  by  the  Drama  committee  of 
the  Twentieth  century  club.  [Boston? 
1910]  35p 
LC  Y 

Two  held  for  film  show  called  obscene.  New 
York  American   May    13,    1919 

TS 

Short  news  item  telling  of  arrest  of  A.  D. 
Harsten,  manager  of  Gotham  Theater  and  I. 
Slutzer,  a  film   distributor. 

Watson,  Edmund  Henry  Lacon,  1865- 
Censorship  of  fiction  and  some  other  mat- 
ters.   Dial   50:296-8  April    16,    1911 

RG  '10-14 

Will  you   stand  with  me?  Woman's   Home 
Companion  43:3   May,    1916 

RG   '16 

With   Everybody's  publishers.    Everybody's 
Magazine    25:        Oct,    1911 

This  is  an  editorial  argument  for  a  censor- 
ship of   the   drama. 

Trials  and  Legal  Discussions 

Bedborough,   George 

"Trial"  of  George  Bedborough;  verbatim 
report.   Adult  2:333-8   Dec,    1898 
TS 

Bedborough,  overwhelmed  by  fear  of  the 
competency  and  honesty  of  the  lawyer  provided 
for  his  defense,  also  fearing  that  an  adequate  de- 
fense would  involve  an  unpleasant  exposure  to 
others,  plead  guilty  on  three  counts:  Ellis 
Psychology  of  sex;  The  Adult  [magazine];  and 
Oswald  Dawson's  Outcome  of  legitimation. 


FREE   SPEECH 


207 


Bedborough    prosecution;    the    indictment. 
London,    Central    criminal    court    1898 
^  [7]p 

TS 

Exact  copy  of  indictment.  Bedborough  finally 
plead  guilty  to  first  three  counts,  covering:  Ellis's 
Studies  in  psychology  of  sex;  Dawson,  H.  Out- 
come of  legitimation;  The  Adult  for  January, 
1808.     Dismissed  as  to  others. 

See  also:  Singer,  George;  Ellis,  Havelock;  Free 
press  defence  committee;  Thompson,  W.  M. ; 
Dawson,  Gladys,  and  Oswald;  Piatt,  William; 
Seymour,  Henry;  Buss,  Berta;  Democritus, 
pseud.;  Kerr,  Dora;  Harman,  Lillian;  Maeter- 
linck, Maurice;  Shaw,  G.  B.  Stewart,  Lucy;  and 
Walker,  Edwin  C. 

Bennett,  De  Robique  Mortimer,  1818-1882 
Circuit  court  of  the  United  States,  dis- 
trict of  New  York,  second  circuit. 
[The  United  States  against  De  Robique 
M.  Bennett,  indicted  as  Debbigne  M. 
Bennett.]  Case  and  exceptions  on  mo- 
tion for  new  trial.  Abram  Wakeman, 
counsel  for  De  Robique  M.  Bennett. 
New  York,  C.  G.  Burgoyne  1879  30p 

TS 

See  U.S.  V.  Bennett,  Blatchford's  Reports  16: 
362;   Federal  cases,   no.    i4S7i- 

Trial  ...  in  the  United  States  circuit 
court;  Judge  Charles  L.  Benedict  pre- 
siding. New  York,  March  18,  19,  20, 
and  21,  1879,  upon  the  charge  of  de- 
positing prohibited  matter  in  the  mail. 
Reported  by  S.  B.  Hinsdale,  official 
stenographer  of  the  court.  New  York, 
Truth  Seeker  office  n.d.  [1880]  viii.5, 
278p 
TS 

For  Ezra  Heywood's  Cupid's  yokes.  For  de- 
cision see:  Blatchford  Reports  13:418;  same  in 
Federal  cases,  no.    15128. 

See  also  Schroeder,  T.  "Obscene"  literature 
and  constitutional   law,  P46,   3:2-14. 

Bennett,  James  Gordon 

Bennett  faces  charge  that  sent  Dunlap 
to  prison;  U.  S.  indictments  call  Herald 
personals  "too  indecent  to  set  forth." 
New  York  American  Oct  23,  1906 

Convicted  for  "personal"  advertisements  al- 
lowed to  be  published  in  the  New  York  Herald, 
because  extraneous  research  disclosed  prostitutes 
using  such  advertising. 

[Comstock,  Anthony]   1844-1915 

[The  people  v.  Geo.  H.  Richmond.]  .\n 
appeal  to  the  people  from  errors  upon 
the  trial,  and  from  a  verdict  of  "ac- 
quitted" ...  in  the  interests  of  public 
morality,   n.t.p.,   n.p..   n.d.  26p 

NY  TS 

Gives  legal  and  moral  justification  for  sex-cen- 
sorship. 

Constitutionality  of  laws  against  indecency. 
Case  and  Comment  15:222-3  March, 
1909 

Review  of  Theodore  Schroeder's  Due  proces.s 
of  law,  in  relation  to  statutory  uncertainty  and 
constructive  offences. 

Republished  in  National  Corporation  Reporter 
39:201  Sept.  30,  1909. 

Coomer,    Hobart 

Brief  of  plaintiflf  in  error;  United  States 
circuit  court  of  appeals  .  .  .  Patrick  S. 


Nagle,    attorney    for   plaintiff   in    error 
Kingfisher,  Oklahoma  n.p., n.d.  24p 
TS 

See:  Schroeder,  T.  Also  Federal  Reporter  213: 
I.   Also:    Industrial    Relations    11:10882. 

In  the  United  States  circuit  court  of  ap- 
peals; eight  circuit;  no.  4050.  [Hobart 
Coomer,  plaintiff  in  error  v.  United 
States  of  America,  defendant  in  error.] 
Brief  of  defendant  in  error.  Isaac  D. 
Taylor,  United  States  attorney  n.p.,  n.d. 
28p 
TS 

Transcript  of  record;  United  States  cir- 
cuit court  of  appeals,  eighth  circuit;  no. 
Nagle,  attorney  for  plaintiff  in  error. 
V.  United  States  of  America,  defendant 
in  error.]  In  error  to  the  district  court 
of  the  United  States  for  the  western 
district  of  Oklahoma,  n.p.  1913  28p 
TS 

See  Federal  Reporter  213:1. 

Coote,  William  Alexander 

(ed.)  Pernicious  literature;  debate  in  the 
House  of  commons;  trial  and  convic- 
tion [of  Henry  Vizetelly]  for  sale  of 
Zola's  novels.  London,  National  vigi- 
lance association   [1889]  32p 

B 

See   also:    Vizetelly,   Henry. 

Dawson,   Gladys,  and   Dawson,   Oswald 

Free     press     fiasco;     balance     sheet    and 
counter   manifesto.   Leeds,  A.   S.   Fryer 
1898  28p 
TS 

Devoted  to  the  controversy  which  arose  from 
Bedborough's  plea  of  guilty.  See  Bedborough 
prosecution; 

Flower,  Benjamin  Orange,  1858-1918 
(comp.)  Story  of  the  Menace  trial;  a 
brief  sketch  of  this  historic  case  with 
reports  of  the  masterly  addresses  by 
J.  L.  McNatt  and  J.  I.  Sheppard.  Aurora, 
Mo.,  United  States  publishing  co.  1916 
61p 

TS 

Trial  resulted  in  acquittal  on  charge  of  send- 
ing "obscenity"  through  the  mails,  which  con- 
sisted of  criticism  of  Roman  Catholic  institutions. 

Glasgow,  J.  Wesley 

In     the     Supreme    court    of    the    United 

States;    October    term,    1911.    No.    1123. 

[J.  Wesley  Glasgow,  appellant  vs.  Wm. 

H.  Moyer,  warden,  appellee.]   Brief  for 

appellant.   Columbian   printing  co.   1911 

21p 
TS 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  United 
States,  October  term.  1911.  [J.  Wesley 
Glasgow,  appellant,  vs.  William  H. 
Moyer,  warden  of  the  United  States 
penitentiary  at  Atlanta,  Ga.]  Brief  for 
appellee.  Washington.  D.C.,  Govern- 
ment print,  off.   1912  7p 

TS  .     ^ 

Glasgow  convicted  of  "obscenity"  on  this.  See 
Glasgow  v.  Moyer,  United  States  Reports  225:420. 


208 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Glasgow,  J.  Wesley  — Continued 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  United 
States,  October  term,  1911.  [J.  Wesley 
Glasgow,  appellant,  vs.  Wm.  H.  Moyer, 
warden  appellee.]  Reply  brief  for  ap- 
pellant. [Washington  Columbian  print. 
CO.,   printer   n.d.   6p 

TS 

Supreme  court  of  the  United  States,  Oc- 
tober term,  1911.  No.  1123.  [J.  Wesley 
Glasgow,  appellant,  vs.  William  H. 
Moyer,  warden  of  the  United  States 
penitentiary  at  Atlanta,  Georgia.] 
Transcript  of  record,  n.p.   fl912]   36p 

TS 

Obscenity  in  book  Personal  beauty  and  sexual 
science.  Conviction  affirmed  in  United  States 
Reports  225:420. 

Harman,    Moses,    1830-1916 

Free  press:  arguments  in  support  of  de- 
murrer to  the  indictment  of  M.  Har- 
mon, E.  C.  Walker  and  Geo.  Harmon 
under  the  Comstock  law;  also  Judge 
Foster's  decision  overruling  the  de- 
murrer. Valley  Falls,  Kan.  Lucifer  pub- 
lishing  CO.    1889  43p 

TS 

In  the  District  court  of  the  United  States 
for  the  district  of  Kansas.  [The  United 
States  of  America,  plaintiff  vs.  Moses 
Harmon,  George  Harman  and  E.  C. 
Walker,  defendants.]  Argument  in  sup- 
port of  demurrer  to  the  indictment;  by 
G.  C.  Clemens  of  council  for  the  de- 
fendant,  n.d.    [1889]    22p 

TS 

In  the  United  States  Circuit  court  of  ap- 
peals, for  seventh  circuit,  October  term 
1904.  [Moses  Harman,  plaintiff  in  error, 
vs.  United  States,  defendant  in  error.] 
Brief  and  argument  for  defendant  in 
error,  n.p.,  n.d.  47p 

TS 

In  the  United  States  Court  of  appeals  for 
the  seventh  circuit;  October  term,  1905. 
[Moses  Harman,  plaintiff  in  error  vs. 
United  States,  defendant  in  error.] 
Brief  and  argument  for  plaintiff  in  er- 
ror, n.p.,  n.d.  38p 

TS 

Transcript  of  record.  In  the  United 
States  Circuit  court  of  appeals  for  the 
seventh  circuit;  October  term,  1904. 
No.  1211.  [Moses  Harman,  plaintiff  in 
error  v.  The  United  States,  defendant 
in  error.]  Seymour  Stedman  and 
Charles  H.  Soelke;  counsel  for  the 
plaintiff  in  error;  C.  B.  Morrison,  coun- 
sel  for   defendant  in   error,   n.p.,   n.d. 

TS 

— ,  Harman,  George,  and  Walker,  E.  C. 
In  the  district  court  of  the  United  States 
for  the  district  of  Kansas.  [The  United 
States  of  America,  plaintiff  v.  Moses 
Harman,  George  Harman  and  E.  C. 
Walker,  defendants  ]  Argument  in  sup- 
port of  demurrer  to  the  indictment. 
Valley  Falls.  Kan.,  M.  Harman  &  son 
n.d.    [1889]   22p 

TS 


Heywood,  Ezra  Hervey 

Free  speech:  report  of  Ezra  H.  Hey- 
wood's  defence  before  the  United  States 
court  in  Boston,  April  10,  11  and  12, 
1883;  together  with  Judge  Nelson's 
charge  to  the  jury,  notes  of  Anthony 
Comstock's  career  of  cruelty  and  crime; 
tragic  and  comic  incidents  in  the 
malicious,  savage  persecution,  suffered 
by  moral  scientists  devoted  to  social 
evolution,  and  other  interesting  matter. 
Princeton,  Mass.,  Co-operative  publish- 
ing CO.  [1883?]  55p 
LC 

Judges,  editors  and  organizations  hold  that 
fundamental  democracy  must  be  pre- 
served .  .  .  comprehensive  review  of 
celebrated  cases  .  .  .  Menace  no.  328 
Aug  11,  1917 

Keedy,  E.  R. 

Criminal  law  meaning  of  obscene  in  fed- 
eral statute.   [Note  to  United  States  v. 
Kennerley,    Federal    Reporter   209:119.] 
Illinois  Law  Review  9:193-4  Oct,  1914 
ILP  '14 

Knowles,  Freeman  T. 

United  States  circuit  court  of  appeals, 
eighth  circuit,  no.  2917.  [Freeman  T. 
Knowles,  plaintiff  in  error,  v.  United 
States  of  America,  defendant  in  error.] 
In  error  to  the  district  court  of  the 
United  States  for  the  district  of  South 
Dakota;  brief  of  plaintiff  in  error.  Lead, 
S.  D.  Register  n.d.  12p 
TS 

See:  Knowles  v.  United  States,  Federal  Re- 
porter 170:409;  Circuit  Court  of  Appeals  Reports 
05:579.  Also:  Industrial  Relations.  Final  Re- 
port and  Testimony  11:10877-8  which  reproduces 
article  on  which  conviction  is  based. 

Macfadden,    Bernarr 

Details  of  the  prosecution  of  the  editor; 
a  brief  history  of  the  "case"  which  had 
for  its  purpose  the  railroading  of  the 
editor  to  the  penitentiary — more  drastic 
perversion  of  the  law  would  be  difficult 
to  find.  Physical  Culture  23:130-6  Feb, 
1910 
TS 

Fined  $2,000  and  given  two  years  in  peniten- 
tiary for:  Growing  to  manhood  in  civilized  so- 
ciety. 

The  long  delayed   trial.   Phvsical   Culture 
18:363-64   Dec,    1907 
TS 

The  editor  of  Physical  Culture  comments  on 
his  conviction. 

Supreme  court  of  the  United  States,  De- 
cember term,  A.D.  1908.  [Bernarr  Mac- 
fadden, petitioner,  against  The  United 
States  of  America,  respondent.]  Brief 
for  petitioner.  New  York  [1908]  54p 
TS 

Defendant  convicted  for  "obscenity"  in  Phys- 
ical Culture  Magazine  for  Nov.  and  Dec.  1906- 
Jan  1907  containing:  Growing  to  manhood  in 
civilized  society,  by  John  R.  Coryell  under  nom 
de  plume..  Conviction  affirmed.  See:  Federal 
Reporter  165:51;  Circuit  Court  of  Appeals  Re- 
port 91:89;  "United  States  Reporter  213 


FREE    SPEECH 


209 


Supreme  court  of  the  United  States,  April 
term,  1909.  [Bernarr  Macfaddeii,  peti- 
tioner, vs.  The  United  States  of  Amer- 
ica, respondent]  no  720.  On  petition  for 
rehear#ing.  Brief  of  petitioner,  n.p.,  n.d. 
[1909]    lOp 

TS 

Appeal  dismissed. 
United  States  circuit  court  of  appeals  for 
the  third  district,  no.  15.  October,  1908. 
[Bernarr  Macfadden,  plaintiflf  in  error, 
vs.  United  States  of  America,  defendant 
in  error.]  .  .  .  Brief  of  plaintiflf  in  error. 
New  York.  Appeal  printing  co.  [1908] 
21p 

TS 

Conviction     affirmed.     See:     Federal     Reporter 
165:51;   Circuit  Court  of  Appeals  Reports  91:89. 

Moore,  Charles  C. 

Behind   the   bars;   31498.   Lexington,    Ky., 
Blue  grass  printing  co.   1899  5-303p 
TS 

From  P225  on  gives  account  of  trial   and  con- 
viction  for  sending  "obscene"  articles,  published 


in  Blue  Crass  Blade  (Cleveland.  O.)  by  mail.  See 
U.S.    v.    Moore,    Federal    Reporter    104:296. 

In  separate  trial,  Hughes,  a  co-defendant  was 
acquitted.  Moore  tried  his  own  case.  Hughes 
had  a  lawyer.  Mo(ir'-  \v.i>  also  arrested  for 
blasphemy  in  this  same  paper.  See  Schroeder, 
T.  Constitutional  free  speech,  p6o-4. 

Richmond,  George  H. 

City,  county  and  state  of  New  York; 
court  of  special  sessions;  the  people  vs. 
Geo.  H.  Richmond;  an  appeal  to  the 
people  from  the  errors  upon  the  trial, 
and  from  a  verdict  of  "acquitted."  Brief, 
n.p., n.d.  26p 
TS 

Singer,  George  Astor 

Judicial  scandals  and  errors.  1.  Press  cen- 
sorship and  compromise.  London,  Uni- 
versity press  1899  7-58p 
TS 

Gives  part  of  proceedings  and  letters  and  ar- 
ticles on  "Bedborough  prosecution."  See  latter 
for    more    information. 


Part  IX.     War  Motive 


xeneral 


D 


iscussions 


Academic  freedom.  New  York  Evening  Sun 

Oct   12,   1917 
TS 

Long  editorial  on   Columbia  university  difficul- 
ties. 

Academic  freedom;  from  President  Lowell's 
annual  report  to  the  board  of  over- 
seers, 1916-17.  Harvard  Graduates'  Mag- 
azine  26:524-7   March,    1918 

RGS  '18 

Academic  freedom  in  war  time:  American 
association  of  university  professors 
takes  stand  for  freedom  of  word  and 
action  on  the  part  of  teachers.  New 
York  Evening  Post  March  1,   1918 

PAIS  '18 

Academic  freedom  not  of  today.  New  York 
Evening  Sun  Oct  11,  1917 

Long  editorial   against   academic   freedom. 

Addams,   Jane,    1860- 

Peace  and  the  press.  Independent  84:55-6 
Oct   11.   1915 
RG  '15 

American,  censorship  in   France.  Review  of 

Reviews   57:205-6  Feb,   1918 
RG  '18 

Alden,  Raymond   Macdonald 

Academic    freedom    in    war    time.    Nation 
106:401-3  April  4,  1918 
RG  '18 

Allin,  CD. 

Belligerent  interference  with  mails.  'Min- 
nesota    Law     Review     1:293-313    April, 
1917 
ILP  '17 


American   press   on    the   war.    Literary    Di- 
gest 51:528-9  Sept  11,  1915 
RG   '15 

Americanism  and  free  speech.  Outlook  112: 

879-80   April    19.    1916 
RG  '16 

Angell,  Norman,  pseud.  (Ralph  Norman 
Angell  Lane) 

Freedom  of  discussion  in  war  time.  .An- 
nals    of     the     American     Academv     of 
Political   and   Social   Science   78:194-204 
July,  1918 
RG    18 

Why    freedom    matters.    New    York,    Na- 
tional civil  liberties  bureau,  70  5th  avc. 
1918  14p 
PAIS  '18 

Another  Ems   message.   World's   Work  33: 

9-11    Nov,    1916 
RG  '16 

Another  menace  to  the  press.   Nation    104: 

205-6  Feb  22,  1917 
RG  '17 

Anstey,  Frank 

Red    Europe.    Melbourne.    Eraser    &   Jen- 
kinson  1919 

The  author,  a  member  of  the  Australian 
Parliament  was  imprisoned  for  this  book.  Gives 
some  account  of  war  censorship  and  deception. 

Appeal  demands  justice  for  Pastor  Russell's 
followers  sent  to  prison  for  being  sin- 
cere; religious  persecution  helped  to 
land  Russellites  behind  bars;  followers 
of  Pastor  Russell,  pursued  by  malice 
of  "orthodox"  clergy,  were  convicted 
and    jailed    without    bail,    though    they 


210 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


made  every  effort  that  was  possible  to 
comply  with  provisions  of  espionage 
law.  Appeal  to  Reason  no.  1216  March 
22.   1919 

Practically  the  whole  issue  of  this  paper  is  de- 
voted to  Russelite  cause.  These  were  religious 
opponents  of  war. 

Are  we  living  un'der  martial  law?  suppres- 
sion of  the  mass-meeting  of  the  Amer- 
ican rights  committee.  Outlook  113: 
107-8  May  17,  1916 

RG  '16 

Are  we  to  have  a  reptile  press?  North 
American    Review    209:9-12    Jan,    1919 

Army's   index.    Literary    Digest    58:31    Sept 

21,  1918 
Atherley-Jones,    Llewellyn   Archer,    1851- 
Governmcnt     and     the     war.     Nineteenth 

Century  77:1429-41  June,  1915 

Atherly,   Jones   J. 

Government     and     the     war.     Nineteenth 
Century  June.   1916 
LC 

Bandwell,  B.  K. 

Effect  of  the  war  on  the  newspaper.  Uni- 
versity   Magazine    13:382-96   Oct,    1914 
LC 

Banks,  William 

Press  censorship.  Canadian  Magazine  46: 
152-5   Dec,  1915 
RG  '15 

Barry,  Richard,  1881- 

Evils  of  organized  censorship  of  press. 
Menace  no.  397  pi  Dec  7,  1918 

Reprint  from  North  American  Review  and 
criticizes  war  censorship  thru  post  office  depart- 
ment. 

"Freedom"  of  the  press?  North  American 
Review   208:702-9    Nov,    1918 
RG  '18 

Republished  under  title  Muzzling  the  press,  in 
La  FoUette's  Magazine,  10:9-10,  December,  1918. 
Describes   some  aspects   of  war  censorship. 

B[ates],    H[enry]    M. 

Freedom  of  press  and  use  of  the  mails. 
Michigan  Law  Review  29:728-31  May, 
1921 

A  critical  review  of  recent  decisions  of  U.S. 
Supreme  Court  on  the  "tendency"  test  as  limit 
of  freedom.  The  discussion  is  around  case  of 
U.S.  rel  Milwaukee  Social  Democrat  v.  Burleson. 

Belgium's   clandestine   journalism.    Literary 

Digest   54:625    March   10,   1917 
RG   '17 

Belligerent  interference  with  postal  cor- 
respondence. Columbia  Law  Review  16: 
665-8  Dec,   1916 

ILP  '17 

Belloc,   Hilaire,   1870- 

Encmy  press.   Land  and   Water   Sept  28, 
1916 
LC 

Bennett,   Arnold,    1867- 

Public  and  the  censor.   Harper's  W'eeklv 
59:508-10  Nov  28,   1914 
RG   '10-14 


Bermett,  Ernest  Nathaniel,  1866- 

Press    censors    and    war    correspondents; 

some  experiences  in  Turkey.  Nineteenth 

Century  73:28-40  Jan,  1913 
Y 

Bigelow    incident.     New     Republic     13:35-7 

Nov  10,  1917 
RG  '17 

Bigelow  was  seized  by  a  mob  of  citizens  and 
severely  horse-whipped  because  of  his  pacifist 
views. 

Blue   pencil.   Living  Age   287:756-9   Dec   18, 

1915 
RG  '16 

Bonner,  Mary  Graham 

Liberty     or     license?     Outlook     117:637-8 
Dec   19.    1917 
RG  '18 

Concerning  the  loyalty  to  the  U.S.  government 
of    foreign-born    school    teachers    and   pupils. 

Borah,   William   Edgar,    1865- 

Censorship  heavier  than  Russian  muzzle: 
Senator  Borah  characterized  the  es- 
pionage bill;  Senator  Cummings  in  voic- 
ing his  opposition,  criticises  President 
Wilson.  New  York  Times  Magazine 
April  29,  1917  p2-3 
Our  apathy  in  war  deplored  by  Borah  .  .  . 
senator  decries  undue  centralization  of 
power  and  unamerican  curb  on  free 
speech.  New  York  Times  Magazine 
June  3,   1917  pl-2 

Bourne,  Randolph  Silliman,   1886- 

Those  Columbia  trustees.  New  Republic 
12:328-29  Oct  20,  1917 

RG  '17 

Brewer,  Daniel  C. 

Rights  and  duties  of  neutrals;  a  discus- 
sion of  principles  and  practices.  New 
York  and  London,  G.  P.  Putnam's  Sons 
1916  260p 

LC 

"Avoidance  of  false  issues — expert  service  for 
the  press,"  P48-S5;  "Expression  of  public  opin- 
ion," pi8s-94 

British  censor  suppresses  news   for  Amer- 
ica. American  Monthly  10:74  May,  1919 
TS 

Concerns  news  of  conduct  of  peace  conference. 

British  censor's  secrets  revealed;  efficient 
organization  which  trapped  spies  and 
intercepted  messages;  held  up  over 
$400,000,000;  confused  enemy  prop- 
aganda, and  discovered  military  and 
economic  condition.  New  York  Times 
68:14  July   13,   1919 

Long  statement  of  war  censorship's  achieve- 
ment. 

British  censorship  of  neutral  mails.  Inde- 
pendent 88:146  Oct  23,  1916 

LC 

British  censorship  of  the  United  States. 
Independent  82:230  May  10.  1915 

RG  '15 

Bromberg,    Frederick    George,    1837- 

Correspondence  of  Frederick  G.  Brom- 
berg with  Central  Law  Journal,  St 
Louis,    Mo.,    on    freedom    of    speech   in 


FREE   SPEECH 


211 


time  of  war  and  eighteenth  amendment 
to  the  Constitution  of  the  United  States, 
1919  and  1920,  and  correspondence  with 
Virginia  Law  Review.  Mobile,  Ala.  1920 
13p 

Brooks,  Sydney 

Lord  Northcliffe  and  the  war.  North 
American  Review  202:185-96  Aug,   1915 

RG  '15 

Press  in  wartime.  North  American  Re- 
view 200:858-69  Dec,  1914 

Biicher,  Karl 

Unsere  sache  und  die  tagespresse.  Tiibin- 
gcn,  J.  C.  B.  Mohr  (P.  Siebeck)  1915 
74p 

LC 

Bulletins  of  the  department  of  Justice  on 
the  interpretation  of  war  statutes. 
Washington,  Government  printing  of- 
fice 1919- 

Campbell,   Alexander 

Censorship  of  the  censor.  English  Re- 
view 22:58-63  Jan,   1916 

Gary.  William  J. 

Espionage  bill:  shall  the  Declaration  of 
independence  and  the  Bill  of  rights  be 
deleted  bv  a  censor?  Congressional 
Record  55:1949-52  May  5,  1917 

PATS   '17 

Case  of  fanaticism.  New  Appeal  no.  1209:4 
Feb    1,    1919 

TS 

Rpcount<;  demand  for  expulsion  of  Professor 
F.  H.  Hodder  from  University  of  Kansas  for 
describing  Theodore  Roosevelt  before  his  death, 
as    a   "typical    Prussian." 

Case  of  Professor  Whipple.  University  of 
Virginia  Alumni  Bulletin  11:86-96  Jan, 
1918 

PAIS  '18 

Case  of  Victor  L.  Berger.  Goodwin's  Week- 
ly  Jan    11.    1919  pl3 

This  deals  with  Berber's  conviction  under  the 
espionage  law.  Unconscious  of  his  humor  the 
editor  denounces  the  German  tyranny  while 
lauding  the  American  form  of  exercising  same 
kind  of  suppression. 

Cass,  Sherlock  Bronson 

Essence  of  dcmocracv;  replv  to  Mr  Stew- 
art.  Nation    105:482-3   Nov   1,   1917 

RG  '17 

Censor  as  Britain's  deadlv  peril.  Literarv 
Digest  50:1238  May  22.  1915 

RG  '15 

Censor  Peregrinus,  pseud. 

L^niversity   in   a   university   court.    Nation 
106:732-4   June    22,    1918 
RG    '18 

Censoriad;  poem.  Candid  Quarterlv  Re- 
view of  Public  .\ffairs  no.  6:369-72  Mav, 
1915 

RGS  "07-15 

Censorship.  La  Follette's  Magazine  9:13 
Oct,   1917 

Reprinted  from  the  Wisconsin  State  Journal, 
date   not   given. 

Censorship,  New  York  Tribune  July  22, 
1917  Review  section  p3 


Censorship    abroad.    Nation    99:513-14    Oct 

29,  1914 
RG  '10-14 

Censorship   and    its    effects.    Quarterlv    Re- 
view  225:148-63   Jan,    1916 
RG  '16 
Censorship    and    its    effects:     in     America. 

Quarterly    Review    no.    446:160-3    Jan, 

1916 
Censorship    and    its    effects:     in     England. 

Quarterly    Review    no.    446:148-59    Jan, 

1916 
Censorship    and    suppression.    Nation     104: 

424-5   April    12,    1917 
RG   "17 
Censorship  and  the  peace  conference.  New 

Republic    17:61-3    Nov    16,    1918 
Censorship    as    finally    enacted.    Survev    38: 

245-6  June  9.  1917 
RG  "17 
Censorship   muddle.    Nation    104:648-9   May 

31.  1917 
RG  '17 
Censorship  of  opinion.   Literarv  Digest  54: 

1767-8  June  9.  1917 
RG  '17 
Censorship    of   the   press.    Nation    105:361-2 

Oct  4,  1917 

Chafee,  Zachariah,  jr. 

Danger    of    repression.    Bulletin    League 
of    Free    Nations    Association    1:2-3,    S 
March,  1920 
TS 

Stenographic  report  of  speech.  Pleads  for 
more  freedom  but  believes  that  "there  are  groups 
in  the  community  who  must  be  forbidden  to 
speak." 

Freedom  of  speech.  New  York,  Harcourt, 

Brace  &   Howe   1920  431p 
Freedom  of  speech.  New  Republic  17:66- 
9  Nov  16,  1918 
RG  '18 

Freedom  of  speech  and  states  rights.  New 
Republic  25:259-62  Jan  26.    1921 
TS 

A  critical  analysis  of  recent  decisions  on  rights 
of   states   to   prohibit  criticism    of   the   war. 

Freedom  of  speech  in  war  times.  Wash- 
ington, Government  printing  olTice  1*?19 
29p 

Fine  digest  of  decisions. 
— Same.   Reprint  Harvard   Law  Review  32: 
932-73   June,    1919 

Chandra,   Ram 

Press  censorship  in   India.  Mother  Earth 
12:89-92   Mav.    1917 
TS 

Tells  of  suppression  of  400  periodicals  for  se- 
dition  under  war  censorship. 

Cobb,  Frank  I. 

Press  and  public  opinion.   New   Republic 
22:144-7    Dec   31,    1919 
TS 

.\  good  discussion  especially  of  censorship 
against  agitators  for  Soviet  form  of  government. 

Cohen,    Chapman 

War  and  freedom  of  the  press.  Free- 
thinker 37:257-8  1917 


212 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Columbia  professors  and  academic  freedom. 

World's   Work  35:123-4   Dec,    1917 
RG  '17 

Conditions    of    war    correspondence.    Spec- 
tator   113:257-58  Aug  22,   1914 
RGS  '07-15 

Congdon,  Charles  T[abor] 

Coming  despotism.    (In   his:   Tribune   es- 
says.   pl87-91)    New    York    1869 
NY 

Congress  fights  censorship.  Independent  90: 

275-76  May   12,   1917 
RG  '17 

Continues  press  censorship;  Senate  refuses 
to  take  muzzle  off.  La  Follette's  Mag- 
azine 11:20-1  Feb,  1919 

Extracts  from  Senator  Borah's  speech  in  sup- 
port of  bill  to  repeal  espionage  law,  and  an  ac- 
count of  the  vote,  etc. 

Convention  of  the  Czecho-Slovak  free 
thought  federation.  Crucible  3:1  ^lay 
4.  1919 

Includes  resolution  opposing  suppression  of 
foreign  language  meetings;  demanding  repeal  of 
espionage  law,  and  criticizing  Czecho-Slovak 
nation  for  giving  official  recognition  to  Christian- 
ity. 

Cook,  Sir  Edward  Tyas,  1857- 

Press  censorship;  interview  given  by  Sir 
Edward  T.  Cook  to  the  Associated 
press.  London,  Burrup,  Mathieson  & 
Sprague,   ltd.   1916  12p 

LC 

Copeland,   Morris   A. 

Free  speech  and  the  League  [of  nations.] 
New  Republic  18:218-19  March  15,  1919 
Fears  tendency  to  restrain  free  speech  pending 
award  in  international  disputes. 

Corwin,  Edward  Samuel 

Constitutional  law  in  1919-1920;  decisions 
of  the  Supreme  court  on  freedom  of 
speech  and  press.  American  Political 
Science  Review  14:655-58  Nov,  1920 

Freedom  of  speech  and  press  under  the 
first  amendment:  a  resume.  Yale  Law 
Journal  30:48   Nov,    1920 

Creel,  George 

Aid    and    comfort    to    the    enemy;    false 
newspaper     reports.     Independent     93: 
446-7   March    16.    1918 
RG  '18 

Public    opinion    in    war    time.    Annals    of 
the  American  Academy  of  Political  and 
Social  Science  78:185-94  July,  1918 
RG   '18 

D..  B. 

Thinkers  not  wanted;  the  dismissal  of 
Charles  Neiderhauser.  Crucible  3:3 
March  23.   1919 

An  emotional  explosion  against  Seattle  school 
board. 

Daily  march  of  events  vindicates  Hearst 
papers'  policy  in  telling  the  truth.  New 
York  American  June  2,  1917 

Danger  ahead.  Nation  108:186-87  Feb  8,  1919 


Dangerous    business    of     making    martyrs. 

American  Monthly  10:79  May,   1919 
TS 

Refers  to  Debs  case  and  other  matters  of  war 
censorship. 

Davis,  Richard  Harding,   1864-1916 

War    correspondent:    change    from    inde- 
pendence    to    close     surveillance.     Col- 
lier's Weekly  48:21-2  Oct  7.  1911 
RG  '10-14 
Dawbam,  Charles 

Abuse  of  the  English  press.  English  Re- 
view 21:490-6  Dec.  1915 
LC 
Debs,  Eugene 

Debs  white  book;  full  text  of  important 
documents    in    famous    Debs    case.    Gi- 
rard,  Kan.,  Appeal  to  Reason  n.d.  96p 
Dent,  Thomas 

Press    censorship.    Central    Law    Journal 
85:158-9   Aug   31,    1917 
ILP  '17 

Dewey,  John,  1859- 

Conscription  of  thought.  New  Republic 
12:128-30  Sept  1.  1917 

In  explanation  of  our  lapse.  New  Re- 
public 13:17-18  Nov  3,   1917 

New  paternalism.  New  Republic  17:216- 
17  Dec  21,  1918 

Deals  with  propaganda  by  censorship  and  the 
mental  attitude  of  habit  brought  on  by  submis- 
sion to  war  censorship. 

Public  education  on  trial.  New  Republic 
13:245-6  Dec  29,   1917 

Dewey,  Stoddard,  1853- 

Behavior  of  war — criticism  among  the  .al- 
lies.  Nation  102:614-15  June  8,   1916 
RG   '16 

Press   in   France — censorship   and   propa- 
ganda. Nation  102:158-9  Feb  10,  1916 
RG  '16 

Discipline   for   the   civilian.    Bellman  23:707 

Dec  29.  1917 
RG  '18 

Dodge,  Henry  Groff 

How     Paris     gets     the     news.     Harper's 
Weekly   62:209-10   Feb   26.    1916 
RG  '16 
Duty    of    a    newspaper.    Spectator    115:649 

Nov  13,  1915 
RGS  '07-15 

Eastman,  Max 

Editorials.   Liberator   1:5-7  Jan,    1919 
TS 

Contents:  Right  to  speak;  Right  to  know; 
Liberation  of  prisoners;  End  of  organized  libel. 
Dealing  with  war  conditions  from  radical  social- 
ist point  of  view. 

Max  Eastman's  address  to  the  jury  in  the 
second  Masses  trial,  in  defence  of  the 
socialist  position  and  the  right  of  free 
speech.  New  York,  Liberator  publish- 
ing CO.  n.d.   [1918]  46p 

Editors  of  the  Masses  were  indicted  for  their 
published  articles.  On  this  occasion  the  jury  for 
the    second   time    disagreed. 


TS 


FREE   SPEECH 


213 


Trial   of    Eugene    Debs.    Liberator    1:1-12 
Nov,   1918 
TS 

— and  Hilquit,  Morris 

Speeches    of    Max    Eastman    and    Morris 
Hilquit   at   the    Masses    dinner,    Mav   9, 
[19181.    I-iberator    1:19-23   June.    1918 
TS 

Eaton,  Walter  Prichard,  1878- 

Why  the  radical  press  is  being  throttled. 
Paladin   1 :1   and  4  no.  3 

Eaton,  William  D. 

Press  censorship  calmly  considered.  Pal- 
adin   1 :1   and  4  no.  3 

Edgerton,  Alice 

Liberty  in  wartime;  the  issue  in  the  I'ni- 
tcd  States  today  in  the  light  of  Eng- 
land's experience.  Reprinted  from  the 
New  York  Evening  Post  of  December 
20,   1917.  New  York  1918 

Elimination    of    Vorwarts     Literary    Digest 

53:1650   Dec   23,    1916 
RG  '17 

Elser.  Frank  B. 

Reporting  the  war  from  deskside.  Ontlook 
112:693-9   March  22,    1916 
RG  '16 

England's    blindfold    eves.    T,iterarv    Digest 

50:100-1   Jan   16,  1915 
RG  '15 

English   and    their    censor.    Current    T-itera- 
ture   52:695-6   1912 


English  newspaper  in  wartime.  Cornhill 
Magazine    n    s    38:335-43    March.    1915 

LC 

Espionage  act  cases.  Harvard  Law  Review 
32:417  1919 

Espionage  and  interference  with  neutrality: 
hearings  before  the  Committee  on  the 
judiciary.  House  of  representatives, 
sixty-fifth  congress,  first  session  on 
H.R.  291— Serial  53— part  2.  April  9  and 
12,  1917.  Washington,  Government 
printing  office    1917  82p 

TS 

Espionage  bill  is  a  violation  of  the  Con- 
stitution of  the  United  States  and  a 
dangerous  assault  upon  the  most  vital 
and  fundamental  liberties  of  the  land. 
New  York  American  April  30,  1917 
Editorial   full  page. 

Espionage  bill  is  simply  the  infamous  Alien 
and  sedition  laws  under  another  name. 
New  York  American  Feb  24.  1917 

Espionage  bill,  now  in  House  [of  represent- 
atives! a  menace  to  American  liberties. 
New  York  American  Feb  26.  1917 

Evening  Mail,  New  York 

Gravest   366   davs:    editorials.    New    York 
Evening  Mail  1916  622p 
LC 

"Mail   seizure?,"   pi 5064 


Ewing,   A. 

Army  and  the  press  in   time  of  war.    In- 
ternational  Military   Digest   3:44-5  Jan, 
1917 
LC 

Fawcett,  James  Waldo 

Free  press:  liow  to  maintain  it;  read  be- 
fore the  Woman's  peace  party  of  New 
York  city.  August  7,  1917.  The  Dawn 
1:2-3  Sept   1,   1917 

Feyler,  F. 

La  crise  politique  Suisse  pendant  la 
guerre.   Lausanne   1916 

Swiss  under  the  General  staff,  I9i4-:9i6.  Ad- 
vantages   and    disadvantages    of   censorship,    pgS 

Fischer,   Paul   David 

Internationale  nachrichtcnverkehr  und 
der  kricg.    Leipzig,   S.   Hirzel    1915  45p 

Fite,  Warner,    1867- 

Free   speech   and  democracy.   Nation   105: 
243  Sept  6,  1917 
RG  '17 

Flag  no  longer  shields  the  slanderer.  Amer- 
ican  Monthly   10:87   May,   1919 
TS 

Deals  with  the  boycott  on  George  Sylvester 
Viereck  because  of  his  alleged  German  propa- 
ganda. 

For  a  sensible   censorship.   Nation    104:518- 

19  May  3.   1917 
RG  '17 

Foreman,  Flora  I. 

To  the  Liberator — greeting!   Liberator  I: 
3    Lin,    1919 
TS 

.\n  account  of  her  own  conviction  under  the 
espionage  law. 

France.    Laws,   statutes,   etc. 

Guerre  dc  1914;  documents  officicls,  textes 
legislatifs  et  reglementaires  .  .  .    Paris, 
Dalloz   [1914-1915]  4v 
LC 

Free   discussion   of  war  and   peace.    Nation 

103:531-2   Dec   7,    1916 
RG  '17 

Free   press.    Survey  33:410-11    Jan   9.    1915 
RG  '15 

Free    speech     Independent    92:273    Nov    10, 

1917 
RG  '17 
Free    speech    and    law.    ("i-.tio-vi-     n  "'  ^r,-l-5 

Feb  16.  1916 
RG  '16 

Free   speech   and  peaceable   asseniblv.    Sur- 
vey 38:144-5  May  12,  1917 
RG  '17 

Free  speech  in  Germany.  New  York  Even- 
ing Post  Jan   18,   1916 

Long  editorial  on  growing  freedom  for  war 
discussion. 

Free   speech    in    Columbia    university.    Out- 
look  117:238-9  Oct   17,   1917 
RG  '17 


214 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Free  speech  in  war.  New  York  World  Sept 
22.  1918 

Long  editorial  in  favor  of  more  freedom,  based 
upon  action  of  President  Wilson  overruling  Post 
office  department,  which  had  excluded  The  Na- 
tion from  the  mails. 

Free    speech    in    wartime.    [Editorial]    New 

York  Sun  Sept   18,   1917 
Free  speech  issue.  Public  21:1283-4  Oct  12, 

1918 
RG  '18 
Free  speech  issue.  Public  21:1283-4  Oct  12, 

1918 

Freedom.    Forward    2:138    Dec.    1918 
Refers  to  war-period  suppressions. 

Freedom  of  speech  at  Harvard  university. 
School  and  Society   1:668   May  8,   1915 

RG  '15 

Freedom  of  the  press  in  France.  Nation 
108:305-6  Feb  22,   1919 

Freer  speech  in  Germany.  New  York  Eve- 
ning  Post  Jan   18,   1916  p8  col.   3-4 

LC 

French  censorship  and  the  truth  about 
France.  New  York  Evening  Post  Nov 
20.    1915 

Garrett,   G.   P. 

Free  speech  and  the  Espionage  act.  Jour- 
nal of  Criminal  Law  and  Criminology 
10:71-5    1919 

Geere.  Frank 

Press  in  time  of  war.  Military  Service  In- 
stitution  of  the   United  States  Journal 
56:9-23  Jan,  1915 
LC 

George,  Harrison 

The  I.  W.  W.  trial.  Chicago.  Industrial 
Workers   of  the   World   n.d.   208p 

Trial  for  conspiracy  to  impair  military  effi- 
ciency, and  evidence  based  mainly  on  radical  pre- 
war publications. 

German  censor  at  work.  Literary  Digest 
53:552  Sept  2,   1916 

RG  '16 

German  people  deluded  by  lies;  how  cen- 
sorship hid  or  falsified  facts.  New  York 
Times  68:sec.  2:1    April  6,    1919 

TS 

Two  column  news  item  from  Berlin  on  war 
censorship. 

Germany,  Switzerland,  and  free  speech. 
Outlook   112:280-2  Feb  2,   1916 

RG  '16 

Germany's  muzzled  press.  Literary  Digest 
55:29-30  Aug  4,   1917 

RG    17 

Gibbs,   Philip 

Now  it  can  be  told.  New  York  and  Lon- 
don, Harper  &  brothers  cl920 
A  record  of  a  war  correspondent. 

1  Goldman,  Emma] 

[Suppression   of   Rabochaya   Rech.]    [Ed- 
itorial] Mother  Earth  11:663  Nov,  1916 
TS 

Convicted  of  violating  war  censorship,  con- 
spiracy to  promote  violation  of  Draft  act. 


Goodrich,  Herbert  F, 

Does  the  constitution  protect  free  speech? 
Michigan  Law  Review  19:487-501 
March,  1921 

A  review  of  judicial  decisions  under  war  cen- 
sorship, from  the  viewpoint  of  a  liberal. 

Government's  control  of  the  press.  Nation 

105:283  Sept  13,  1917 
RG  '17 

Graham,  William  R. 

Looting  the  people's  war  chest;  men  who 
stole  millions  go  free,  congressman  de- 
clares, while  political  prisoners  are 
punished  for  opinion.  La  Follette's  Mag- 
azine 12:121,  123  Aug,  1920 

Graham    was    chairman    of   congressional   com- 
mittee on   war  expenditures. 

Grane.  William  Leighton,  1855- 

Public  opinion  and  war.  Contemporary 
Review  104:360-7  Sept.  1913;  Same. 
Living  Age  279:101-7  Oct  11,  1913 

RG  '10-14 

Graves,  John  Temple,    1856- 

Value  of  a  free  press.  Proceedings  of 
the  Academy  of  Political  Science  7:365- 
8  July,   1917 

RGS    '17 

Great  Britain.  War  office.  Army 

Memorandum  on  the  censorship.  London, 
Eyre  &  Spottiswoode,  ltd.  1915  5p 

LC 

Memorandum  on  the  Official  press  bureau. 
London,  Eyre  &  Spottiswoode,  ltd. 
1915   3p 

LC 

Green.  Francis  Vinton.  1850- 
Uses  and  misuses  of  censorship;  modern 
war  function  has  developed  until  many 
of  its  rules  serve  only  to  annoy  people 
at  home  without  concealing  news  from 
the  enemy.  New  York  Times  Magazine 
April  28.  1918  p4  and  5 

Green,  William  R. 

Espionage  bill;  I.  W.  W.  organization; 
powers  of  postmaster  general.  Congres- 
sional  Record  56:6799-800   May  9,   1918 

PAIS  '18 

Gregory,  Thomas  Watt,  1861- 

Stronger  espionage  laws  are  needed.  At- 
torney-general Gregory's  warning.  Ofli- 
cial  Bulletin  2:1-2  April   16,   1918 

PAIS  '18 

What  the  department  of  justice  is  doing 
to  curb  espionage  summarized  by  At- 
torney-general Gregory  in  a  statement 
showing  results  accomplished  under 
limitations  of  laws.  Official  Bulletin  2: 
6-7    April    19,    1918 

PAIS  '18 

Growing  demand  for  the  suppre?;sion  of  the 
German-American  press.  Current  Opin- 
ion 63:151-2   Sept,    1917 

RG  '17 

GseU.   Paul 

A  propos  de  la  censure.  Reuve  de  Paris 
22:134-53   July    1,    1915 

LC 


FREE    SPEECH 


215 


Gunn,  John  W. 

Reign  of  terror  stamped  out  free  speech 
in    Minnesota    during    war.    Appeal    to 
Reason  no.   1244  Oct  4,  1919 
TS 

Deals  at  lengrth  with  mob  rule  in  suppressing 
meetings  of  Non-partisan  league  and  socialists 
done   with   express  official   sanction. 

Haines,  Austin  P. 

Borrowing  with  a  club.  New  Republic  18: 
273-5  March  29,  1919 
TS 

Tells  of  lawless  suppression  of  speech  and  as- 
sembly during  war,  especially  of  the  Non-parti- 
san league. 

Hale,  William   Bayard 

Bolshevism    or    free    speech — is    this    the 
only    alternative?    Viereck's    American 
Monthly   10:135-8  July,    1919 
TS 

Severely  criticises  post-bellum  activities  of  our 
war  censorship. 

Hall,   Granville   Stanley 

Morale   in    war   and    after.    Psycliological 
Bulletin   15:361-426   Nov,   1918 
TS 

Several  pages  deal  with  the  Morale  and  knowl- 
edge,  discussing  war  censorships. 

Halleck,    Henry    W. 

Military  espionage.  American  Journal   of 
International   Law   5:590-603  July,   1911 
AMI  '11 
Hand,  John 

Socialist  press  throttled  by  the  postal 
censorship.  Social  Revolution  Aug,  1917 
p2 

Hapgood,   Norman,   1868- 

How  fighting  governments  suppress  opin- 
ion, il  Harper's  Weekly  61:76-8  Julv 
24.  1915 

RG  '15 

Hard,  WUliam 

Mr  Burleson,  espionagent.  New  Republic 
19:42-5  May  10,  1919;  76-8  May  17,  1919 
TS 

Gives  considerable  concrete  information  of 
literature  suppressed  by  the  post  office  depart- 
ment during  the  war. 

Harden,  Maximilian 

Bethmann-Hollweg's    peace    plans.      New 
York    Times    Magazine    4:1106-9    Sept, 
1916 
LC 

Argues  that  censorship  of  the  press  in  Ger- 
many is  preventing  the  world  from  having  a  clear 
idea  of  the  true  feelings  of  the  Germans  regard- 
ing peace  proposals.  Is  opposed  to  the  censor- 
ship. 

Hardships  imposed  by  the  censor.  Literary 

Digest  49:308  Aug  22,  1914 
RG  '10-14 

Harrison,  Austin,   1873- 

Lack   of   unanimitv   in   the    British   press. 
English    Review'  21:317-23    Oct,    1915 
LC 

Gott  strafe  all  intellect!    English  Review 
24:470-3   May,    1917 
RGS  '17 

Lion  in  blinkers.  English  Review  19:204- 
15  Jan.   1915 
RGS  '07-15 


Responsibility  of  the  press.   English   Re- 
view 21:113-23   Aug,    1915 
RGS  '07-15 
Hart,   F.   G. 

Power    of    government    over    speech    and 
press.  Yale   Law  Journal  29:410 
Hayes,   Ellen,   and  others 

Freedom  of  speech,  press  and  conscience. 

Intercollegiate  Socialist  Dec,  1917  p26-7 

Report  of  speeches  inspired  by  war  censorship 

delivered  at  conference   at  Belfort,  Long  Islana, 

Sept.    i8  to  24,   1917. 

Haywood,  William  D. 

Evidence  and  cross  examination  of  Wil- 
liam D.  Haywood.  [Chicago,  I.  W.  W. 
pub.   bu.]    n.d.  312p 

Evidence  of  one  defendant  for  benefit  of  all, 
on  trial  for  conspiracy  to  impair  military  effi- 
ciency. 

Hazeltine,  Annie  Wetmore 

Blood  of  the  martyrs.  Dial  66:93-4  Jan 
25.  1919 

Deals    with    political    prisoners    under    various 

war  statutes. 

Headlam,  Cecil 

Censorship  of  the  press.  Quarterly  Re- 
view 234:132-46  July,    1920 

Hedin,  Sven  A. 

With  the  German  armies  in  the  West;  tr. 
from  the  Swedish  by  H.  G.  de  Walters- 
torflf.   New   York,   John    Lane   co.    1915 
402p 
LC 

German  press,  P318,  355;  British  press,  P3S4-6 

Hershey,   Amos    S. 

So-called  inviolability  of  the  mails.  Amer- 
ican Journal  of  International  Law  10: 
580-4  July,    1916 

ILP  '17 

Hibben,  Paxton 

News  from  the  near  east.   New   Republic 
24:71-3  Sept  15,  1920 
TS 

Exhibits  practical  operation  of  censorship  of 
news  after  the  armistice. 

Hilaire  Belloc's  hope  for  the  free  press  in 
England.  Current  Opinion  65:250-1  Oct, 
1918 

RG  '18 

Humble  inquiry.  Nation  107:362  Oct  5,  1918 
RG  '18 

Holmes,    John    Hajmes 

(ed.)  Freedom  of  speech  and  of  the  press; 
striking  passages  from  distinguished 
champions  of  freedom  of  expression. 
New  York.  National  civil  liberties 
bureau,  70  Fifth  av.;  Washington  office, 
647  Munsey  bldg.  1918  30p 
TS 

Quotations  selected  to  assist  pacifists  against 
war  censorship. 

Hough,  Charles  M. 

Law  in  war  time.  Harvard  Law  Review 
31:692-96   1918 

House,    S.    Daniel 

Inquisition  in  our  public  schools.  New 
Republic   17:374  Jan  25,  1919 


216 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


[Hurt,  Walter] 

Hold-up    of    Paladin    is    brought    to    end. 
Paladin    1:1    March  23,   1918 

Hyde,  Charles  Cheney 

Espionage  act.   American  Journal   of   In- 
ternational   Law    12:142-6  Jan,    1918 

RGS   '18 

Imputations  upon  character.  [That  a  man 
is  a  German.]  Solicitors'  Journal  and 
Weekly  Reporter  59:297-8  Feb  27,  1915; 
Irish   Law  Times  49:59   March   6,    1915 

ILP  '15 

India's  freedom  in  American  courts.  New 
York,  Friends  of  freedom  for  India 
1919   lip 

TS 

Give.s  brief  statement  of  cases  against  Indian 
sympathisers  who  were  prosecuted  under  espio- 
nage  law. 

Interference    by     belligerents    with     mails. 

American  Journal  of  International  Law 

10:sup404-26  Oct,   1916 
AMI  '16 

International  Bible  students  freed.  IMenace 

no.   415:1    April    12,    1919 
TS 

Tells  of  the  appeal  and  release  on  bail  of 
"Russellites"   convicted   under   espionage   law. 

Intimation  why  U.S.  trade  secrets  are  re- 
vealed thru  British  censorship  of  mails 
and  cables.  Saturday  Evening  Post  189: 
61  Nov  11.  1916 

LC 

Is  a  charge  of  disloyalty  or  sedition  libel- 
ous? Canada  Law  Journal  53:382-3  Nov, 
1917 

ILP  '17 

Is  our  free  press  free?  recent  tests  by 
foreign  agents.  Everybody's  Magazine 
33:512  Oct,  1915 

RG  '15 

Italian  censorship.  Journal  of  Criminal  Law 
and    Criminology    6:921-2    March,    1916 
ILP  '16 

Jeze,   Gaston 

Regime  juridique  de  la  presse  en  Angle- 
terre  pendant  la  guerre.  Revue  de  Droit 
Public    et    de    la    Science    Politique    32: 
229-65   April,    1915 
LC 

Johnson,    Alexander 

Free  speech.  Survey  41:778  March  1,  1919 

For   free   speech   after   the   war,   not   during   it. 

Johnson,  Alvin 

More    educational    inquisition.    New    Re- 
public 17:305-6  Jan  11,  1919 

Discusses  case  of  a  teacher  dismissed  who  was 
for  our  success  in  the  war  but  against  crushing 
Germany. 

Johnston,  H.  H. 

Press    and    the    government    of    the    dav, 
English  Review  21:166-77  Sept,  1915 
LC 

Jordan,  David  Starr,  1851- 

Freedom  in  wartime.  Public  21:567-9  May 
4.   1918 


Keifer,  Daniel 

Our  constitution  as  related  to  war.  Pal- 
adin   1:1-4   March  23,    1918 

Presents  liberal  view  of  a  single  faxer. 

KUmer,  Joyce,   1886-1918 

War  censorship  modeled  on  that  of  the 
church;  Archbishop  Bonzano,  apostolic 
delegate  here,  says  that  nations  of  Eu- 
rope got  their  idea  of  censorship  from 
Index  expurgatorius.  New  York  Times 
Magazine  Sept  2,    1916  pl3-14 

TS 

King,  Judson 

Banking  and  steel  interests  and  the  Town- 
ley  trial.  Public  22:1089-90  Nov  22,  1919 
TS 

Shows    economic    motive    behind    the    prosecu- 
tion of  Mr  Townley  of  the  Non-partisan  league. 

Kohler,  Max  J. 

Right  of  asylum,  with  particular  reference 
to  the  alien.  American  Law  Review  51: 
381-406  June,    1917 
ILP  '17 

Kuttner,   Alfred    Booth 

Studv  of  American  intolerance.  Dial  64: 
223-5,  282-5  March  14-28,  1918 

Labadie,  Ernest,   1845- 

.  .  .^    La     presse     bordelaise     pendant     la 

revolution;      bibliographic      historiciue. 

Bordeaux,    Impr.    de    Y.    Cadoret    1910 

xxii,299p 
LC 

La   Follette,    Robert   M. 

Free  speech  and  the  right  of  Congress 
to  declare  the  objects  of  the  war; 
speech  of  the  Hon  Robert  AI.  La  Fol- 
lette of  Wisconsin  in  the  Senate  of  the 
United  States,  Saturday,  October  6,  1917. 
Washington,  Government  printing  ofifice 
1917  31p 

TS 

Reprinted    in    full    in    La   Follette's    Magazine, 
9:4-11,    November    igi?- 

Speech:  hearings  before  the  committee  on 
privileges  and  elections,  United  States 
Senate,  65th  congress,  second  session, 
on  the  Minnesota  commission  of  public 
safety,  petition  for  proceedings  looking 
to  expulsion  of  Senator  Robert  M.  La 
Follette,  on  account  of  a  speech  de- 
livered before  the  Nonpartisan  league, 
at  St  Paul,  Minn.,  on  September  20, 
1917.  Washington,  D.C.  Government 
printing  office    1918   161p 

TS 

Contains    a   thoro    review   of   precedents,    both 
judicial  and  congressional. 

Lamar,  William   H, 

Government's  attitude  toward  the  press. 
Forum  59:129-40  Feb.  1918 

Landon,   Perceval 

War  correspondents  and  the   censorship. 
Nineteenth    Century    52:327-57    1902 
Y 


FREE    SPEECH 


217 


Law  of  the  Debs  case;  constitutional  con- 
struction by  the  Supreme  court.  New- 
York  and  Washington,  Xational  civil 
liberties  bureau  [1919]  4p 

TS 

Lawrence,  David 

International  freedom  of  the  press  essen- 
tial to  a  durable  peace.   Annals  of  the 
American  Academy  72:139-41    Tulv,  1917 
RG  '17 

Leagfue  for  the  amnesty  of  political  pris- 
oners 

Recognition     and     anmesty     for     political 
prisoners.    New    York,    League    for    the 
anmesty  of  political  prisoners  n.d.  [1918] 
8p 
TS 

Lee,  James  Melvin 

Censorship  of  the  press.  Bellman  25:325- 
6  Sept  21,  1918 
RG  '18 

Le    Poittevin,    Gustave,    1856- 

.  .  .  Liberte  de  la  press  depuis  la  revo- 
lution, 1789-1815.  Paris.  A.  Rousseau 
1901    330p 

LC  NY 

Le   Queux,  William 

Britain's    dcadlj^    peril;    are    we    told    the 
truth?  4th  ed  London,  S.   Paul  &  com- 
pany  1915    176p 
LC 

"Peril  of  the  censorship,"  p66-8o;  "Peril  of 
the  press  bureau,"  p8i-95 

Libels   on   "Germans."   Law  Journal   49:597 

Oct   31,    1914 
ILP  '14 

Liberty  defense  union:  purpose:  to  organize 
popular  support  in  behalf  of  persons 
prosecuted  for  the  exercise  of  their 
constitutional  right  of  free  speech  and 
free  press.  138  W.  13th  st.,  New  York 
city    [1918] 

Liberty   of   thought    and   discussion.    Econ- 
omist 81:767  Nov  6,  1915 
LC    " 

"In  sympathy  with  Lord  Morley's  appeal  in 
the  House  of  lords  for  fuller  information  to  be 
allowed   in   the   press." 

License  of  the  tongue.  Public  22:258-9 
March   15,   1919 

Gives  account  of  mob  censorship  and  argxies 
that  "in  .  .  .  hours  of  public  peril  common  sense 
admits  that  broad  powers  of  repression  may  well 
be  placed  in  the  hands  of  approved  and  elected 
government." 

Lies  of  the  allies  (periodicaH.  Open   Court 

30:508-10  Aug,  1916 
RGS    16 

Limits    of    free     speech.     Nation     105:59-60 

July  19,  1917 
RG  "17 

Limits  of  free  speech;  Senator  La  Follette's 
speeches.  Literary  Digest  55:11  Oct  2(i, 
1917 

RG   "17 


Lippman,  Walter 

Free  speech  and  free  press  as  factors  in 
international  affairs.  Bulletin  League  of 
Free   Nations  Association   1:1-2  March, 
1920 
TS 

Stenographic  report  of  speech.  Demands 
freedom  of  information  and  discussion  for  peace- 
treaty   material. 

Lloyd,  William   Bross 

Socialist  party  in  trial.  Liberator  1:10-13 
Feb,  1919 
Long  term  sentences.  "The  Nation"  maga- 
zine calls  atention  to  long  terms  given 
out  for  improper  remarks.  La  Follette's 
Magazine  10:12  Dec,  1918 
London,  Meyer,  and  others 

Espionage.  Congressional  Record  56:6652- 
64  May  7,  1918 
PAIS  '18 

Lovejoy,  Arthur  Oncken,  1873- 
Academic  freedom  in  wartime.  Nation  106: 
401-3  April  4,  1918 
RG  '18 
Lowell,  Abbott  Lawrence,   1856- 

Academic    freedom.    School    and    Society 
7:619-22   May  25,    1918 
Lundberg,   Albert 

Rationale    of   free    speech.    Nation    106:13- 
14  Jan  3,  1918 
RG   '18 

MacDonald,  William,    1863- 
Press  and  the  censorship  in  England  and 
France.   Nation   105:287-9  Sept  13,   1917 
RG  '17 
McElroy,    Robert    McNutt 

And   he    answered    the   red    stranger.    Ar- 
bitrator 2:7-9  Aug,  1919 
TS 

Answers  Norman  Thomas  and  A.  De  Silver. 
Denies  that  war  censorship  created  political 
prisoners  and   opposes   amnesty  for  such. 

McKaig,  Ray 

New  Minnesota  despotism.  Public  21:465- 
67  April   13,   1918 

Magnes,  Judah  Leon 

General  atnnesty  demanded:  United  States 
lags  behind  other  countries  in  granting 
pardon  to  its  political  prisoners.  La 
Follette's  Magazine  11:72-3,  76  May, 
1919 

TS 

Full   report  of  address  made  April   17,   1919  at 
Washington,  D.C. 
Set    the    prisoners    free.    Forward    3:45-6 
March,    1919 

Deals  with  industrial  agitators  under  war  cen- 
sorship and  with  conscientious  objectors. 

March  opposed  censorship;  kept  news  chan- 
nels open  between  army  and  nation, 
says  M.  E.  Pew,  director  of  depart- 
ment's news  bureau.  New  York  Eve- 
ning Sun  33:17  April  28.   1919 

TS 

Marshall,   Louis 

Free  criticism  a  fine  thing  for  nation 
at  war.  New  York  Times  Magazine  Jan 
27.    1918    p9 

PATS    '18 


218 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Martyring  a  newspaper;  the  Courrier  de  la 
Champagne  (Rheims).  Literary  Digest 
54:1782-3   June   9,    1917 

RG    -17 

Martin,  Frederick  Roy,   1871- 

Plea  for  an  uncensored  press.  Proceedings 
of  the  Academy  of  Political  Science  7: 
360-4  July,   1917 

RGS   '17 

Memorial  to  the  Congress  of  the  United 
States  concerning  conditions  in  Minne- 
sota, 1918.  By  the  National  and  state 
executive  committees  of  the  National 
nonpartisan  league.    [1918]    120p 

Menace  reader  fined  $100.  Menace  no.  398:3 
Dec    14,    1918 

David  Wagar  of  Oneonta,  N.Y.,  was  convicted 
of  attacking  Knights  of  Columbus  in  The  war 
chest  unmasked.  This  was  deemed  a  violation 
of  the  Espionage  act. 

MUes, 

Criticism  in  war.  English  Review  23:538- 
42  Dec,  1916 
RGS  '16 

National    discipline.    English    Review   23: 
159-62  Aug,  1916 
RGS   '16 

Militarism  and  the  cause  of  free  speech. 
International   11:68-9  March.  1917 

Military  censorship  in  Santo  Domingo.  Na- 
tion 61:81  July  17,  1920 
TS 

Reproduces  official  rules  of  military  censorship. 

Millard,  Thomas  F. 

War  correspondent  and  his  future.  Scrib- 
ner's  Magazine  37:242-8  Feb,  1905 
Y 

Mr    Burleson    to    rule    the    press.    Literary 

Digest   55:12   Oct  6,    1917 
RG   '17 

Misimderstood  ambassador.  Literary  Digest 

53:663  Sept  16,  1916 
RG  '16 

[Mob  in  high  places.]  New  Republic  17: 
149-51  Dec  7,  1918 

Moens,  Herman  M.  Bemelot 

Injustice    to    a    Holland    scholar    by    the 
Department     of     Justice.     Medico-legal 
Journal  37:77-80   Sept,   1920 
TS 

This  is  a  short  but  detailed  account  of  the 
persecution  of  the  author,  his  conviction,  appeal 
and  final  acquittal  on  a  charge  of  "obscenity" 
in  photographic  studies  of  race  mixture  for  sci- 
entific purposes.  The  fear  psychology  of  the  war, 
induced  groundless  suspicions  that  Moens  was  a 
German  spy. 

MoflFatt.   Cleveland 

Ways  to  stop  seditious  speeches.  New 
Yisrk  Times  Magazine  Aug  26,  1917  p9 

[Moore,  Charles  A.,  jr.]  Fra  Carlos,  pseud. 

Things  worth  thinking  about;  a  plea  for 
Americans  to  be  guarded  in  their  ex- 
ercise of  free  speech,  so  that  our  soldiers 
may  be  protected  from  treachery  from 
within.  Our  Town  [Greenwich,  Conn.] 
4:7  June   23,   1917 


More  condemned  books.  Literary  Digest  59: 

27  Oct  12,  1918 
RG  '18 

Gives  a  list  of  books  debarred  from  army 
camps. 

Morse,   E.    L.    C. 

Excluding  speakers  from  Harvard.  Nation 
104:158-9  Feb  8,  1917 
RG  '17 
Mother  Earth  [magazine.]  v.  12  June,  1917 

Suppressed  by  the  post  office  department  for 
articles  tending  to  discourage  enlistment  and  con- 
scription. 

Must  we  go  to  jail?  North  American  Re- 
view 206:673-7   Nov,    1917 

RG  '17 

Muzzling  the  German  press.  Literary  Di- 
gest  51:1344   Dec   11,   1915 

RG   '16 

Nation  and  the  post  office.  Nation  107:336- 
7>1  Sept  28,    1918 

RG  '18 

Nation  hits  back.  Literary  Digest  54:1502 
May  19,   1917 

RG  '17 

National  civil  liberties  bureau 

Conviction  of  Mrs  Kate  Richards  O'Hare 
and  North  Dakota  politics.  New  York, 
National  civil  liberties  bureau,  70  5th 
av.   1918  12p 

PAIS  '18 

Outrage  on  Reverend  Herbert  S.  Bigelow 
of  Cincinnati,  Ohio,  October  28,  1917. 
New  York.  National  civil  liberties 
bureau,   70  5th  av.   1918   15p 

PAIS   '18 

Nelles,  Walter 

(comp.)  Espionage  act  cases,  with  certain 
others  on  related  points — new  law  in 
making  as  to  criminal  utterance  in 
wartime.  New  York,  National  civil  lib- 
erties bureau  1918  92p 

TS 

Extracts  from  judicial  decisions  and  statute. 
Retrial  of  the  Masses  case.  Forward  (Bos- 
ton, Mass.)  2:116-17  no.  8 
Neurasthenic  press.   Spectator  116:278   Feb 

26,  1916 
RGS   '16 
Newman,    A.    Evelyn 

Plea  for  tolerance.  Dearborn   [Mich.]   In- 
dependent 20:12  Jan    10,   1920 
TS 

Recounts  and  disapproves  opposition  of  Amer- 
ican Legion  to  industrial  agitators  and  to  German 
music  and  musicians.     Portrait  of  author. 

Newspaper  in  time  of  war.  Living  Age  285: 

605-11  June  5,  1915 
RG   '15 
Newspapers  and  war.  Harper's  Weekly  60: 

184  Feb  20,   1915 
RG  '15 
Newspapers    for    neutral    countries.    Broad 

Arrow  95:484  Oct  29,  1915 
LC 
Newspapers     in     wartime.     Public    21:334-7 

March  16,  1918 
RG    '18 


FREE    SPEECH 


219 


New   York   Tribune    and    the    government. 

Outlook    (London)    37:632-4    May    20, 

1916 
LC 
Not  for  editors  only.  Outlook  118:130-1  Jan 

23.   1918 
RG  '18 
[Notes    on    British    censor    of    the    mails.] 

Congressional    record.    64th    Congress, 

1st  session,  v53,  pt.  2:1675-76 
LC 
O'Brian,   John   Lord,    1874- 

Civil    liberty    in    war    time.    Washington 

[D.C.]   Government  printing  office  1919 

22p 
LC 

Paper  presented  at  the  42d  annual  meeting  of 

the   New   York  state   bar   association  held  in   the 

city  of  New  York  on  Jan.    17  and   18,   1919- 

O'Donnell,  T.  J. 

Military   censorship   and   the    freedom   of 
the  press.  Virginia  Law  Review  5:178- 
89  Dec,  1917 
ILP  '17 

Off  with  her  head.  Nation  108:18  Jan  14, 
1919 

Tells  of  arrest  of  Theodora  Pollock  in  Sacra- 
mento for  having  a  copy  of  Solidarity  in  her 
possession,  and  an  unpublished  poem  of  hers  on 
Peace,    written    before    the    war. 

Official  correspondence  relating  to  the 
censorship  of  telegrams  transmitted  by 
cable  and  wireless.  American  Journal 
of  International  Law  9:spec  sup270- 
313  July,  1915 

RGS    '07-15 

O'Higgins,  Harvey  Jerrold,   1876- 
Frecdom  of  speech.  Century  95:302-3  Dec, 
1917 

RG   '17 

O'Laughlin,  John  Callan,  1873- 
Army  and  the  press;  address  before  the 
Army    war    college.    Washington,    Sud- 
warth  CO.   [1913]   18p 

LC 

Relation  of  press  correspondents  to  the 
Navy  before  and  during  war.  Wash- 
ington, Government  printing  office  1913 
16p 

LC 

Olmstead,   A.   William 

Prussian  method.  New  Republic  17:168 
Dec  7,  1918 

On  freedom  of  reading.  Truth  Seeker  45: 
164  March   16,   1918 

An  editorial  on  suppressing  the  Truth  Seeker 
in  the  U.S.  army,  quotes  part  of  the  corre- 
spondence between  Theodore  Schroeder  and 
Secretary  of  War  Baker. 

Our    ferocious    sentences.    Nation    107:504 

Nov  2.   1918 
RG  '18 

Pacher.   Gustav   von 

Die  Dreiverbandspresse;  ihr  anteil  an  der 
kricgsentfachung  und  ein  weg  zu  ihre 
bekampfung.  Leipzig,  S.  Hirzel  1915 
79p 

LC 


Pacifist   pilgrims.    Literary    Digest   55:16-17 

Sept   15,    1917 
RG   '17 

Palmer,  Charles,  and  others 

Press   control   in  wartime.    Nation    (Lon- 
don)   17:607-8,    637-9,    677-8   Aug    7-21, 
1915 
LC 

Palmer,    Frederick,    1873- 

Things    you    don't   know   about   the    war. 
il     Collier's    Weekly    55:5-6    April     17, 
1915 
RG  '15 

Partiality  of  the  press.  Independent  84:44- 

5  Oct  11,  1915 
RG  '15 

Passionate  sympathy.  Independent  84:456-7 

Dec  20,   1915 
RG  '16 

Perris,  George  H. 

Campaign  of  1914  in  France  and  Belgium. 
London    and     New    York,     Hodder    & 
Stoughton   1915  447p 
LC 

Censorship  of  the  British  and  French  press, 
P79-82 

Pinchot,   Amos 

Masses   case.    Liberator    1:5-6  June,    1918 
TS 

Reports  on  first  trial  of  the  editors  on  charge 
of  conspiracy  to  obstruct  recruiting.  The  jury 
disagreed. 

Protecting  the  old  order;  decision  of 
Supreme  court  in  Debs  case  abridges 
free  speech  amendment  to  constitution. 
Court  mandate  is  looking  backward.  I-a 
Follette's   Magazine    11:39   March,    1919 

TS 

Plea  for  contented  ignorance.  Independent 
90:193-4  April  28,   1917 

RG  '17 

Poindexter,    Miles 

Your  right  to  speak  freelv.  Forum  60:670- 
76   Dec,   1918 

— and  Simmons,  Fumifold  McLendel 
Right  of  free  criticism;  after  much  talk 
about  partisanship  and  disloyalty  lead- 
ers of  both  political  parties  now  uphold 
honest  discussion  of  governments  er- 
rors in  war  management.  New  York 
Times  Magazine  April  21,  1918  p2-3 

Policy  of   mystification.    Spectator    113:788- 

90  Dec  5,  1914 
RGS   '07-15 

[Political  and  military  censorship  in  Swit- 
zerland, and  how  it  is  applied  during 
the  war.]  Revue  Militaire  Suisse  Sept, 
1915   p388 

LC 

Pollard,  Albert  Frederick,  1869- 

Rumour  and  historical  science  in  time  of 

war.    Contemporary    Review    107:321-30 

March.   1915 
RG  '15 


220 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Pollock,  Frederick 

Results  of  the  spy  mania;  a  distinguished 
English  jurist  says  our  courts  during 
war  were  suffering  from  an  "acute  form 
of  truculent  panic."  La  Follette's  Mag- 
azine 22:189  Dec,  1920 
TS 

Discusses  case  of  Abrams  v.  United  States. 
United  States  250:616.  Republished  from:  Law 
Quarterly   Review  Oct.    1920. 

Post-office  censors  under  fire.  Literary  Di- 
gest   55:19   July   28.    1917 
RG   '17 

Post  office,  non-mailable  matter,  seditious 
publications.  [Masses  pub.  co.  v.  Pat- 
ten, Federal  Reporter  246:24.]  Michigan 
Law  Review  16:387  March,  1918 

ILP  '18 

Power,  W.  Kent 

Rights  of  individuals   in   peace   and   war. 

Canadian  Law  Times  37:33-48  Jan,  1917 
ILP  '17 
Press    censorship.    English    Review    22:261- 

72  March,  1916 
RGS  '16 
Press  censorship.  Living  Age  284:124-6  Jan 

9,   1915 
RG  '15 

Press  censorship  in  France.  Nation  108:221 

Feb    8,    1919 
Press    offences.    Justice    of    the    Peace    81: 

137-8  April  7,  1917 
ILP  '17 

Press    in    wartime;    bv    a    journalist.    Fort- 
nightly   Review   85:528-36   March,    1906 
Press    under    post    office    censorship.    New 

York  Times  Magazine  7,ptl:235-66  Nov, 

1917 
RG  '17 
Problem   of   free   speech.    Bellman   24:287-8 

March  16,  1918 
RG  '18 
Professors   in  battle   arrav.    Nation    106:255 

March   7,   1918 
RG    '18 

Propaganda    and    censorship.    Freeman    2: 

197-98  Nov  10,  1920 
TS 

Exposes  the  fakery  in  the  war-time  exposures 
and  claims  of  Mr  Rotham  of  Providence  Journal. 

Protest  against  a  muzzier  press.  Survey  38: 
358  July  21,  1917 

RG  '17 

Prussianism  conquers  the  world.  Indepen- 
dent  90:395    June    2,    1917 

RG  '17 

Pry  the  lid.  Wisconsin  Alumni  Magazine 
19:30-1   Dec,   1917 

Deals  with  the  case  of  Professor  Fiese  expelled 
for   speaking   disparagingly   of   the   Liberty   loan. 

Public  confidence  and  the  censor.  World's 
Work  34:243-4  July,  1917 

Public   opinion   in   wartime.    New    Republic 

12:204-7   Sept  22,    1917 
RG  '17 


Public,    the    university    and    the    professor. 

Independent  92:118-19  Oct  20,    1917 
RG  '17 
Randall,    James    Garfield 

Germany's   censorship   and   news   control. 

North  American  Review  208:51-62  July, 

1918 
RG  '18 
Recent   American   performance   suppression 

of  freedom.  Arbitrator  3:13-14  Jan,  1921 
Very   brief   recitals   of  cases   of  suppression   of 

free  speech. 

Recruiting,    and    the    censorship.    Quarterlv 

Review  222:130-58  Jan,   1915 
RG  '15 
Red  hysteria.    New   Republic   21:249-52  Jan 

28.  1920 
TS 

Good  discussion  discrediting  hysteria  on  which 
war  censorship  was  largely  based  and  bolshevik 
hysteria  on  which  further  laws  are  demanded. 
Incorporates  important  statement  from  Judge 
George    W.    Anderson. 

Reds  in  Toledo  [Ohio]  riot  as  the  police 
stop  Debs'  speech;  convict  agitator's 
followers  storm  city  hall  when  admis- 
sion is  denied.  New  York  Evening 
World  59:7   March  31,    1919 

TS 

Mayor  Cornell  Schreiber  said  no  meeting 
would  be  permitted  anywhere  in  the  city  where 
men  of  radical  tendencies  were  to  speak. 

Reed,  John 

About  the  second  Masses  trial.  Liberator 
1:36-8  Dec,  1918 
TS 

Blessings    of    militarism.    Liberator    2:29- 
30  May.   1919 
TS 

Quotes  -Guy  Empey  who  in  his  magazine  with 
impunity  advocated  mob  violence  against  Bolshi- 
vists,  although  laws  are  enforced  to  punish  un- 
popular persons  for  any  advocacy  of  lawlessness. 

An  heroic  pacifist  [Bertram  Russell]  jailed 
in     England    for    defending    ''conscien- 
cious    objectors"    to    war.    Masses    9:10 
Nov,  1916 
TS 

On    intervention   in    Russia.    Liberator    1: 
14-17  Nov,  1918 
TS 

Deals  with  suppression  of  information  as  to 
Russi.in   conditions  by   our   war   censorship. 

Regulations  for  printed  matter  sent  out 
from  Great  Britain.  Canadian  Military 
Gazette  Nov  14,  1916  pl7 

LC 

Reithdorf,   F.  V. 

Censor  in  Germany.  Canadian  Magazme 
47:238-40   July,    1916 

RG  '16 

Release  of  political  prisoners.  Dial  66:5-6 
Jan  11,  1919 

Requests  for  censorship  by  press  of  cer- 
tain war  news,  as  revised  and  urged 
upon  all  American  publishers,  are  given 
out  by  the  Committee  on  public  infor- 
mation. Official  Bulletin  1:10.  16  Dec 
31.  1917 

P.ATS   '18 


FREE    SPEECH 


221 


Revocation  of  mailing  privilege  violation 
of  espionage  act.  [Jefifersonian  publish- 
ing CO.  V.  West.]  Virginia  Law  Register 
ns    3:537-41    Nov,    1917 

ILP  '17 

Robbins,    Alexander    H. 

Vital  importance  of  a  liberal  construc- 
tion of  the  Espionage  act.  Central  Law 
Journal  87:145    1918 

Robert  Herrick's  indictment  of  American 
war  correspondents.  Current  Opinion 
59:265   Oct,   1915 

RG    15 

Robinson,  James  Harvey,   1863- 

Threatened  eclipse  of  free  speech.  x'Xtlan- 
tic   Monthly   120:811-18   Dec,   1917 
TS 

Dc.hIs   with   wartime   problems   of  censorship. 

Robinson,  William  Josephus 

Birth  control  and  war.  Voice  in  the 
Wilderness  1:29  no.  2 

For  this  magazine  Dr  Robinson  was  indicted 
under  the  Espionage  act. 

Roe,  Gilbert  E[mstein] 

Free  speech  and  free  press;  .  .  .  discusses 
need,  in  time  of  war,  of  obtaining  col- 
lective judgment  of  the  people  on  the 
conduct  of  the  war.  La  Follette's  Maga- 
zine  9:8-10   Aug,    1917 

Repeal  of  the  Espionage  law;  an  address 
delivered  before  the  Civic  club  of  New 
York.  December  3,  1918.  Dial  66:8-11 
Jan    11,    1919 

Recites  some  of  its  wrongs  and  demands  repeal. 

Rogers,    Bruce 

In  Alaska.  Liberator  1:45-6  Feb,  1919 
Tells  of  his  own  conviction  for  publishing  the 
statement:  "To  be  an  American  patriot  be  willing 
to  die  in  defense  of  the  trade  supremacy  of  the 
British  Empire  and  her  subjugation  of  India  and 
Ireland."      Also   mentions   other   convictions. 

Rome  kidnapping  an  army  .  .  .  hierarchy 
attempts  to  dominate  Polish  army 
.movement  and  by  shrewd  play  has  suc- 
ceeded so  well  that  post  office  depart- 
ment not  comprehending  the  full  im- 
port of  the  non-Catholic  Polish  protest, 
has  ruled  against  the  paper  which  crit- 
icizes the  hierarchy's  scheme.  Menace 
no.  389:1   Oct   12.   1918 

Roosevelt,   Theodore,    1858-1919 

Lincoln    and    free    speech.    Metropolitan 
Magazine   Mav.   1918  p7-8 
TS 

Rotzel.   Harold 

Our  political  heretics.  Forward  3:20-2 
Feb.    1919 

Deals  with  conscioncious  objectors  to  war  and 
convicts  under  espionage  law  and  for  general 
amnesty. 

Russell.  Bertrand  Arthur  William,  1872- 
Frecdom    of    speech    in    England     School 
and  Society  4:637-8  Oct  21.  1916 
RG  '16 


Russian    press    since    the    revolution.    New 

Statesman   9:176-77   May   26,    1917 
RGS   '17 

Ryan,  John  Augustine 

Freedom   of  speech   in   wartime.   Catholic 
World    106:577-88   Feb,    1918 
RG  '18 

Sampson,  John,  pseud. 

Folly  of  penalizing  speech.  Paladin  1:3 
March    23,    1918 

Samuel.   Herbert   Louis,   1870- 

Liberty  of  speech  and  of  the  press,  New 
Statesman  9:223-5  June  9,   1917 
RGS  '17 

Sandon,   P. 

War  correspondents  and  the  censorship. 
Nineteenth  Century  52:327-37  Aug,  1902 

Sargent,  Noel 

Press    censorship.    Central    Law    Journal 
85:60-8   Julv   27,    1917 
ILP  '17 

Schreiner,   George   Abel 

The    free    presscrs.    Issues    of   Todav    1:3 
Tan  1.  1921 
TS 

Schroeder,  Theodore  Albert,   1864- 

Free    speech    and   the    war.    New    Review 
3:158-61    March,    1915 
TS 

Meaning    of    free    speech    (for    pacifists). 
New  York,  Free  speech  league  1917  16p 
TS 

Political  crimes  defined.  Michigan  Law 
Review  8:30-44  Nov,  1919;  Call  Maga- 
zine Jan   11,   1920  p6-8 

Outlines  psychologic  aspect  of  criminology,  and 
illustrates  it  m  cases  of  political  offenders,  in 
contrast  with  customary  legal  usage.  European 
revolutionists  should  be  protected  here,  and  war's 
opponents    here    pardoned. 

Wliere  speech  is  not  free.  Call  Magazine 
2:8-9  Sept  5.  1920;  2:6-7  Sept  12,  1921; 
2:6-7  Sept  19,  1920 

This  article  summarizes  all  the  laws  of  all 
ihe  states  of  the  United  States  which  in  any  way 
abridged  freedom  of  speech  before  the  enact- 
ment of  war  censorship. 

Secret  journalism    in    Belgium.    New    York 

Times   Magazine  6:136-7  .\pril,   1917 
RG  '17 

Seditious    libel.    [Editorial]    Canadian    Law 

Times  37:819-20  Dec.  1917 
ILP  '17 

Seditious  publications  in  the  public  library. 

Scientific   American   Supplement   85:112 

Feb  16.  1918 
RG  '18 

Sense   and   censorship.    Literarv    Digest   34: 

1318-19   May  5,   1917 
RG    17 
Sense    and    the    censor,    il    Literary    Digest 

51:1076   Nov    13.    1915 
RG  '15 


222 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Sentenced  to  twenty  years  prison.  New 
York,  Published  by  the  Political  pris- 
oners defense  and  relief  committee 
[1919]  32p 

Case  of  U.S.  v.  Jacob  Abrams,  Samuel  Lip- 
man,  Hyman  Lachowsky,  Mollie  Stimer.  Jacob 
Schwartz  died  before  trial.  These  were  sen- 
tenced for  twenty  years  for  distributing  a  circular, 
the  essence  of  which  was  these  words:  "Will  you 
allow  the  Russian  revolution  to  be  crushed? 
The  Russian  revolution  calls  to  the  workers  of 
the  world  for  help."  Also  gives  account  of  al- 
leged "third  degree"  by  the  police,  and  some 
facts  about  the  trial. 

Sessions,   Clarence   W. 

Right  to  criticise  in  wartime;  a  noted 
charge  by  .  .  .  judge  of  Western  dis- 
trict of  Michigan  on  the  right  of  speech. 
La  Follette's  Magazine   10:11  Jan,  1918 

Shepherd,  William  Gimn 

Forty-two-centimeter  blue  pencil.   Every- 
body's   Magazine   36:470-82  April,    1917 
RG  '17 

Shoddy  Prussianism  in  England;  dismissal 
of  Bertrand  Russell  from  Trinity  col- 
lege. Literary  Digest  53:559-60  Sept  2, 
1916 

RG  '16 

Sinclair,   Upton 

Censorship  and  secret  treaties.  Appeal  to 
Reason   no.    1219:2  April   12,    1919 
TS 

Tells  how  the  Military  intelligence  arranged 
to  have  British  censor  exclude  Upton  Sinclair's 
[magazine]  from  England  during  war.  Re- 
printed in  the  American  Monthly  10:69-70,  May, 
1919. 

Free  speech  in  wartime.  Upton's  Sinclair's 
[Magazine]    1:3-4  Nov,   1918 

Strangling   the   truth.    Appeal    to    Reason 
4:[1]    May   3,    1919;    New   Justice    1:3-5 
May   1,   1919 
TS 

Tells  of  suppression  of  news  of  Russian  revo- 
lution. 

Skeletons  in  the  newspaper  closet.  Literary 

Digest  51:592-3   Sept   18,   1915 
RG  '15 

Spanish  espionage  bill.  Law  Times  145:266 

Julv  27,   1918 
ILP  '18 

Special   Debs  number.   New  Justice  no.  4:1 

April  1,  1919 
TS 

Contains  articles  on  Eugene  V.  Debs  convicted 

under  war  censor.ship. 

Spirit  shown  by  American  press  since  Uni- 
ted States  entered  war  is  praised  by 
Secretary  Daniels.  Official  Bulletin  2:8 
Feb  12,   1918 

PATS  '18 

Squires,   Grant 

Experiences    of    a    war    censor.    Atlantic 
Monthly  33:425-32  1899 
Y 

Stamping  out  sedition  in  the  Columbia 
faculty.  Current  Opinion  63:294-6  Nov, 
1917 

RG  M7 


Stanchfield,  John  Barry,  1855- 

Peril  of  espionage.  North  American   Re- 
view 203:830-40  June,   1916 
RG  '16 

Steiner,   Franklin 

Exclusion  of  the  Truth  Seeker.  Truth 
Seeker   45:634-35    Oct   5,    1918 

Several  issues  of  the  Truth  Seeker  were  ex- 
cluded from  the  mails  for  criticising  the  Y.  M. 
C.  A.,  it  being  held  that  this  Christian  organi- 
zation is  part  of  the  military  establishment  of  the 
U.S.  and  during  the  war  it  is  therefore  seditious 
to  make  criticism.  Commented  on  in:  The  Na- 
tion under  title  "A  humble  inquiry".  This 
latter  quoted  in  The  Call. 

Sterling,  Jean 

Silent  defense  in  Sacramento.  Liberator 
no.    12:15-17    Feb,    1919 

These  Industrial  Workers  of  the  World  being 
tried  for  conspiracy  under  the  Espionage  act  re- 
fused to  speak  in  their  own  defense  or  to  allow 
an  attorney  to  do  so.  This  is  a  fine  account  of 
the  trial. 

Stevenson,  Archibald  E. 

The  world  war  and  freedom  of  speech. 
New  York  Times  (Book  Review  Sec- 
tion) Feb  13,  1921 

The  manager  of  legislature's  expulsion  of  so- 
cialists, and  anti  bolshevist  raids  here  criticises 
Prof.  Zachariah  Chafee's  liberal  attitude  on  Free- 
dom  of  speech. 

Stewart,  Charles  David 

General  order  number  38.  Century  96:365- 
6  July,   1918 
RG  '18 

Stewart,   Herbert   Leslie 

Columbia  university  and   the  liberties  of 
the    citizen.    Nation    105:451-2    Oct    25, 
1917 
RG  '17 

Free  speech  and  democracy.  Nation  105: 
342-3   Sept  27,   1917 
RG  '17 

Freedom    of    speech    in    wartime.    Nation 
105:219-20  Aug  30,  1917 
RG  '17 

Stifling    war    correspondents.    Literary    Di- 
gest 49:585   Sept  26,   1914 
RG   '10-14 

Stowell,  EUery  Cory,   1875- 

Rationalism  v.  sedition.  Nation  105:538 
Nov    15,    1917 

RG  '17 

Sufficiency  of  indictments  under  the  Es- 
pionage act.  Central  Law  Journal  87: 
400  1918 

Suppressed  edition  of  Vorwiirts.  Survey  34: 
458  Aug  21,  1915 

RG   '15 

Suppression  of  free  speech,  free  press  and 
rights  of  assemblage.  Social  Revolution 
(formerly  the  National  Rip-Saw)  14:1 
May,   1917 

[Szinnyey,  Stephen  Ivor]    1873- 
Neutrality?     The     crucifixion     of     public 
opinion,    from    the    American    point    of 
view,  by  S.  Ivor  Stephen  [pseud]   Chi- 
cago, The  neutrality  press  1916  227p 

LC 


FREE    SPEECH 


223 


Talcot,  Norman 

Freedom  of  the  press.  Our  Town  [Green- 
wich, Conn.J  6:2  Aug  24,  1918 

Deals  with  resolution  of  Greenwich  Bureau  of 
business  affairs  placing  a  ban  on  The  Irish 
World,  presumably  for  anti-British  attitudes  dur- 
ing the  war. 

Teaching     liberty     to     Santo     Domingo — . 

Mother  Earth  11:759-61  Feb.  1917 
TS 

Editorial  quotes  censorship  proclamation  of 
military  governor  under  United  States  occupa- 
tion. 

Ten  years  for  criticism;  sentence  given 
Mrs  Rose  Pastor  Stokes.  Literary  Di- 
gest  57:13   June    15,    1918 

RG  '18 

She  had  declared  war  to  be  for  commercial,  not 
democratic   motive. 

Thomas,  Norman 

Justice  to  war's  heretics.  Nation  107:547- 
9  Nov  9,   1918 

—and  De  Silver,  Albert 

Amnesty  for  political  prisoners.  Arbitra- 
tor 2:1-6  Aug,  1919 
TS 

Recounts  nature  of  many  cases  and  gross  re- 
sults of  war  censorship.  Answered  same  issue 
by  R.  M.  McElroy. 
To  the  American  people;  report  upon  the 
illegal  practices  of  the  United  States 
Department  of  Justice.  National  pop- 
ular government  league,  Washington, 
D.C.   May,   1920  67p 

An  eminent  committee  headed  by  R.  G.  Brown, 
exhibits  some  of  the  official  lawlessness  under 
Espionage  act  and  against  industrial  radicals. 

Too  dangerous  for  us  to  read.  Literary  Di- 
gest  54:1413    May    12,    1917 

RG   '17 

Toward  the  new  education;  the  case  against 
autocracy  in  our  public  schools  (being 
a  reply  to  a  pamphlet  issued  by  the 
Schoolmaster's  association  of  New 
York  and  vicinity  and  the  American  de- 
fense society,  entitled  "Unpatriotic 
teaching  in  public  schools.'  )  New 
York,  Teachers'  union  of  the  city  of 
.  New  York  [1918] 

Towards  academic  freedom.  Nation  106:77 
Feb   14,  1918 

Towards  academic  freedom;  differences  be- 
tween trustees  and  faculty  at  Columbia 
university.  School  and  Society  7:231-3 
Feb  23,   1918 

RG  '18 

Townsend,  Arthur  O. 

Repression  the  path  to  peace.  Arbitrator 
2:1-6  May,    1920 

This  answers  John  Haynes  Holmes'  Repression 
the  road  to  rebellion.  This  present  issue  con- 
tains also  short  rebuttal  by  Holmes.  Townsend 
has  florid   rhetoric   instead   of  observed   facts. 

Treason  scented  by  suffragettes;  suppressed 
number  of  Britannia.  Literary  Digest 
52:166-8  Jan   22,   1916 

RG  '16 

Treason  on  the  street  corners.  Nation  105: 
214-15  Aug  30,  1917 

RG  '17 


Trial  and  conviction  of  Emma  Goldman 
and  Alexander  Berkman.  Mother  Earth 
12:129-63   July,    1917 

TS 

Reprinted  in  book  form  with  the  address  of 
Harold  A.  Content,  ass't.  U.S.  att'y  and  de- 
fendants to  the  jury  and  other  material  pertain- 
ing to  the  trial  and  conviction  under  war  censor- 
ship. 

Turner,   Edward   Rasrmond,   1881- 

Censorship  and  false  news.  Nation  99:280 
Sept  3.   1914 

RG  '10-14 

United  States.  General  staff.  War  college 
division 
Proper  relationship  between  the  army  and 
the  press  in  time  of  war.  Prepared  by 
the  War  college  division.  General  staff 
corps,  as  a  supplement  to  the  State- 
ment of  a  proper  military  policy  for 
the  United  States  .  .  .  Washington, 
Government  printing  office  1916  13p 

LC 

United  States.  War  department 

Annual  reports,  1916.  v  1  Washington, 
Government  printing  office  1916 

LC  ...... 

"Censorship  of  information  in  time  of  peace, 
p2o6-7 

Recommendations  of  General  Scott  for  strict 
censorship  in  peace  and  war.  See  also  his  an- 
nual report  for  ipiS- 

Unofficial  news.  Spectator  114:395-6  March 
20.  1915 

RGS  '07-15 

Uses  of  publicity.  Spectator  114:288-90  Feb 
27.    1915 

RGS  '07-15 

Vagaries  of  the  Russian  censorship.  Out- 
look 111:692  Nov  24,  1915 

RG  '15 

Vance.   W.   R. 

Freedom  of  speech  and  of  the  press.  Min- 
nesota   Law    Review  2:239    1918 

Van  Loon,  H.  W. 

Tricks  of  newspaper  correspondents.  Na- 
tion 100:77  Jan  21,  1915 
RG  '15 

Vardaman,  James  K. 

Free  speech  the  sheet  anchor  of  our  lib- 
erty; speech  of  Hon  James  K.  Varda- 
man of  Mississippi  on  proposed  amend- 
ment to  the  espionage  law  in  the  Sen- 
ate of  the  United  States.  Saturday,  April 
6.    1918.   Washington    1918 

Veil  of  secrecy  that  has  dropped  over  the 
war.  Current  Opinion  61:160-1  Sept, 
1916 

RG  '16 

Villard.    Oswald   Garrison,    1872- 

Allen  Eaton  case.  Nation  105:537-8  Nov 
15.    1917 

RG  '17 

Professor  Eaton  was  forced  to  resign  from 
the  staff  of  the  University  of  Oregon,  merely  be- 
cause he  attended  a  meeting  of  the  People  s 
Council,  and  contributed  a  letter  about  it  to  an 
Oregon  paper. 


224 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Villard,   Oswald   Garrison  — Continued 

Press  as  affected  bv  the  war.  Review  of 
Reviews  51:79-83  Jan,  1915 

RG  '15 

Vital  importance  of  a  liberal  construction 
of  the  espionage  act.  Central  Law 
Journal  87:145-8  Aug  30,  1918 

ILP  '18 

Verse,  Mary  Heaton 

Twenty  years.  Liberator  4:10-13  Jan.  1921 

Briefly  reviews  almost  unbelievable  outrage  of 
"justice"  in  the  conviction  of  I.  W.  W.  leaders 
for  conspiracy  under   the  Espionage  law. 

War  and  a  free  press.  Outlook  116:56-7  May 
9.   1917 

RG  '17 

War  and  free  speech.  [Editorial]  Case  and 
Comment  22:515-16  Nov,   1915 

War  and  public  opinion.  Popular  Science 
Monthly   85:615-16    Dec,    1914 

RG   '15 

War  and  the  press.  Spectator  113:222-3  Aug 
15.    1914 

RGS   '07-15 

War-correspondent  of  the  new  dispensation. 
Literary  Digest  54:129  Jan  20,   1917 

RG    '17 

War-time  prosecutions  and  mob  violence  in- 
volving the  rights  of  free  speech,  free 
press  and  peaceful  assemblage  (from 
April  L  1917  to  March  1,  1919).  New 
York,  National  civil  liberties  bureau 
1919   56p 

TS 

This  list  of  cases  is  compiled  from  correspon- 
dence and  press  clippings;  it  is  by  no  means  com- 
plete. 

Warner,  Arthur  H. 

Sainte-Anastasie:  the  censorship  in 
France.  Outlook  116:258+  June  13, 
1917 

RG  '17 

Weinberger,  Harry 

Free  speech  and  free  press  must  not  be 
destroyed  in  effort  to  destroy  autocracy 
— an  appeal  for  the  fundamental  rights 
of  democracy.  New  York  Evening  Post 
April  10,  1917  pll  col.  1-2 
Free  speech  in  time  of  war.  The  Masses 
9:34  July,  1917 

TS 

What  an  unjust  censorship  has  done  for 
England,  the  same  censorship  will  do 
for  the  United  States.  New  York  Amer- 
ican May  1,  1917 

What  the  French  are  not  allowed  to  learn. 
Independent  92:499-500  Dec  15,  1917 

RG  '18 

What  the  censor  senses.  Literarv  Digest 
53:967  Oct   14,   1916 

RG   '16 

Where  America  stands.  Evening  Post  118: 
10  Nov  15,  1919 

Long  editorial  on  decision  of  United  States 
Supreme  Court  on  conviction  under  Espionage 
law. 

Where  the  censor  might  halt.  Literary  Di- 
gest 55:20  Dec  15,   1917 

RG  '18 


While  Palmer  [U.S.  general  attorney]  de- 
cides against  Gene  Debs,  federal  judge 
upholds  right  of  opinion.  Appeal  to 
Reason  no.  1220:1  April  19,  1919 

TS 

Whipple,    Leon 

Case  of  Leon  Whipple;  statement  con- 
cerning dismissal  from  the  University 
of  Virginia.  Nation  105:690-91  Dec  20, 
1917 

RG  '18 

Professor  Whipple  was  dismissed  because  he 
expressed  his  views  on  pacifism  during  the  recent 
war. 

White,  James  W. 

Textbook  of  the  war  for  Americans,  rev 
and  enl  Philadelphia,  John  C.  Winston 
CO.    1915    551p 

LC 

Why  is  Roosevelt  unjailed?  Nation  107:546 
Nov  9.   1918 

WUey,  WUliam  Foust,  1874- 

Riding  a  wave  of  fanaticism  in  a  sea  of 
paternalism,  the  creatures  of  our  own 
making  seek  our  destruction.  Cleveland, 
O.,   United  press  association   1917 

uses 

Wilson,   Woodrow 

Let  fools  talk  .  .   .  President  tells  French 
Academy    freedom    of    speech    by   such 
is  greatest  safety.  New  York  American 
May  13,  1919 
TS 

Report   of  President   Wilson's   Paris   speech. 

Wise   Minneapolis.   Outlook    117:10   Sept  5, 

1917 
RG  '17 
Work   of   the   war   censor   on    field    and   at 

home.  Literary  Digest  57:46-53  April  20, 

1918 
RG  '18 

Zench,  W.  E. 

Truth  about  Kate  Richards  O  Hare  case. 

Appeal  to  Reason  no.  1243  Sept  27,  1919 

This    whole    issue    is    devoted    to    showing   the 

political  motives  and  feud  to  which  Mrs  O'Hare 

became   an   incidental   victim. 

—and  O'Hare,  Kate  Richards 

Truth  about  the  O'Hare  case,  by  W.  E. 
Zench;  and  Kate  Richards  O'Hare's  ad- 
dress to  the  court.  St  Louis,  Mo.,  Frank 
P.  O'Hare  n.d.  1919  31p 

Trials,    Reports    of,    and    Legal 
Treatises 

Abrams,  Jacob,  et  al  n   •     j 

In  the  Supreme  court  of  the  United 
States,  October  term,  1918,  no.  316. 
[Jacob  Abrams  et  al  plaintiff  in  error 
against  United  States  of  .America,  de- 
fendant in  error.]  In  error  to  District 
court  of  the  United  States  for  the 
Southern  district  of  New  York.  Brief 
of  plaintiff  in  error.  Harry  Weinberger 
attorney  for  plaintiff  in   error 

This  brief  reproduces  the  leaflets  on  which  the 
defendants    received   a    20   year   sentence.      Ihey 


FREE    SPEECri 


225 


were  anarchists  opposed  to  Imperial  Germany, 
but  also  opposed  to  intervention  in  Soviet  Russia. 
Leaflets  sought  to  stop  that  intervention. 

Transcript  of  record.  Supreme  court  of 
the  United  States,  October  term,  1918. 
[Jacob  Abrams  et  al,  plaintiff  in  error 
vs.  the  United  States]  In  error  to  the 
District  court  of  the  United  States  for 
the  Southern  district  of  New  York. 
[1919]  268p 
TS 

Sentenced   to   20   years   for  opposing   interven- 
tion in  Russia. 

Twenty  years  in  prison.  New  York,  Polit- 
ical prisoners  defense  and  relief  com. 
1919  32p 

Berkman,  Alexander,  and  Goldman,  Emma 

Anarchism  on  trial;  speeches  .  .  .  before 
United  States  district  court  in  the  city 
of    New    York,    July,    n.p.,    n.d.    [1917] 
87p 
TS 

Convicted    under    war    censorship.       Reprinted 
with   additions   from   Mother   Earth,  v.    12,   July, 


Borah,  William  E.,  and  others 

Punishment  of   seditious  acts  and   utter- 
ances. Congressional  Record  56:5025-49 
April  5,  1918 
PAIS    '18 

Bringing    the    constitution    into    disrepute. 
New    Republic   21:330-31    Feb    18,    1920 
TS 

Gives  an  account  of  the  conviction  of  advo- 
cates of  the  pardon  of  political  prisoners.  "Crime" 
seven  months  after  armistice. 

Debs,  Eugene  Victor 

Supreme  court  of  the  United  States,  Oc- 
tober term,  1918.  No.  714.  [Eugene  V. 
Debs,  plaintiff  in  error  against  the  Uni- 
ted States  of  America:  in  error  to  the 
District  court  of  the  United  States  for 
the  northern  district  of  Ohio.]  Brief 
of  Gilbert  E.  Roe  as  Amicus  curiae. 
New  York   [1919] 

Debs   case.    New    Republic    19:151    Mav   31, 

1919 
TS 

Defends  court  decision  in  conviction  of  Debs 
under  espionage  law,  and  criticises  former  article 
of  Ernst  Freund.  In  a  short  note  E.  F.  makes 
self  defense. 

Defense  of  Victor  Rerger.  American  Month- 
ly  11:110-13  Dec,   1919 

Reviews  defense  made  in  the  hearing  on  which 
Victor  Bcrger  was  expelled  from  the  House  of 
representatives. 

Ferrari,  Robert 

Trial     of     political     criminals     here     and 
abroad.   Dial  66:647-9  June  28,   1919 
TS 

Makes  the  contrast  in  part  by  reference  to  trial 
of  John  Reed  and  Scott  Nearing  under  espionage 


Gallagher,  Anne 
Case     of     Louise     Olivereaux.     One     I'ig 
Union   Monthly   1:11-12  Oct,   1019 
TS 

Criticises    Olivereaux    defense    as    not    in    har- 
mony with  class  conscious  mass  action. 


Germany.   Laws,   statutes,   etc. 

Kriegs-notgesetze,  lubst  <kn  ausfuhrungs- 
bestimmungen  des  Kundesrats  und  des 
preussischen  handelsniiiiisters.  Berlin, 
C.   lieymann   1914- IV lu 

LC 

Goldman,  Emma,  and  Berkman,  Alexander 
Fragment  of  the  prison  experience  "f 
Emma  Goldman  and  Alexander  Merk- 
man,  in  the  state  prison  at  Jefferson 
City,  Mo.,  and  the  U.S.  penitentiary  at 
Atlanta,  Ga.,  February,  1918-Octobcr, 
1919.  New  York,  Stella  Comvn  [1919] 
25p 

Convicted  because  of  opposition  to  the  war, 
these  anarchists  describe  their  treatment,  and  the 
discriminations  made  against  intellectual  offend- 
ers. Berkman's  article  was  first  published  in  The 
Contitution,    Atlanta,    Ga.,    Oct.     i,     1919. 

Supreme  court  of  the  United  States,  ( Oc- 
tober term,  1917.  [Emma  Goldman  and 
Alexander  Berkman,  plaintiffs  in  eiror, 
against  The  United  Stales,  defendant  in 
error.]  no.  702.  Brief  on  behalf  of  the 
plaintiffs  in  error.  [New  York  1917}  lOOp 
TS 

Supreme  court  of  the  United  States,  Oc- 
tober term,  1917.  [Emma  Goldman  and 
Alexander  Berkman,  plaintiffs  in  error, 
vs.  the  United  States.]  Transcri])t  of 
record,   n.p.,    1917  545p 

Great  Britain.  Laws,  statutes,  etc. 

[Manual  of  emergency  legislation,  com- 
prising ail  the  acts  of  Parliament,  proc- 
lamations, orders,  etc.,  passed  and  made 
in  consequence  of  the  war  to  Septem- 
ber 30th,  1914;  edited  by  Alexander 
Pulling.  London.  Darling  &  son,  ltd. 
1914   572p 

LC 

Manuals  of  emergency  legislation.  De- 
fence of  the  realm  regulations  made  to 
May  23d,  1916,  reproduced  in  consol- 
idated form  .  .  .  with  notes,  tables  of 
the  regulations,  and  orders  made  under 
the  regulations;  edited  by  Alexander 
Pulling.  2d  ed  London,  Darling  &  son 
1916  102p 
LC 

—Supplement  .  .  .   1914-1913.   London   l^U- 

1915  4v 
LC 

Hardwick,  Thomas  W.,  and  others 

Seditious  acts  and  utterances:  conference 
report.    Congressional    Record    56:6420- 
34  May  2,   1918 
PAIS  '18 

Haywood,  William   D, 

In  the  District  court  of  the  L'nited  States, 
northern  district  of  Illinois,  eastern  di- 
vision. [The  L^nited  States  of  America, 
vs.  William  D.  Haywood,  et  al]  In- 
dictment on  sections  6,  19  and  37  of  tli  • 
criminal  code  of  the  United  States,  and 


216 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Haywood,   William   D.  — Continued 

section  4  of  the  espionage  act  of  June 
15,  1917.  Chicago,  I.  W.  W.  pub.  bu. 
[1917]   32p 

Indictment  of  five  counts  against  about  175 
I.W.W.s    for    anti-war    conspiracy. 

Opening  statement  of  Geo.  F.  Vanderveer 
in  the  case  of  the  U.  S.  A.  vs.  Wm.  D. 
Haywood,  et  al.  Chicago,  I.  W.  W.  pub. 
bu.  1918  102p 

On  indictments  for  conspiracy  to  impair  mili- 
tary efficiency.  Speaker  was  attorney  for  I.  W. 
VV's. 

Jeze,  Gaston 

Regime  juridique  de  la  presse  en  Angle- 
terra  pendant  la  guerre.  Revue  du  Droit 
Publique   Oct-Dec,   1915 

Johnson,   C.   R. 

Conviction  of  [A.  C]  Townley.  New  Re- 
public 20:18-20  Aug  6,   1919 
TS 

Townley  is  pursued  because  president  of  the 
Non-partisan  league. 

Johnson,   H.   W.,   and   others 

Seditious    acts    and    utterances.    Congres- 
sional   Record   56:6501-23    May  4,    1918 
PAIS  '18 

Karsner,   David 

Debs  goes  to  prison.   New   York,   Irving 
Kaye  Davis  &  co.  1919 
TS 

King,  Judson 

Case  of  Mr  [A.  C]  Townley;  judge  re- 
fuses to  admit  testimony  showing  ad- 
vocacy of  liberty  bond  buying;  defend- 
ant not  allowed  to  address  the  jury.  La 
FoUette's  Magazine  11:130-1 
TS 

Republished  from  The  Nation  (New  York). 
Deals  with  trial  of  Townley,  Joseph  Gilbert,  and 
Irving  Freitag,  of  the  Non-partisan  league,  be- 
fore Judge   Dean   at  Jackson,   Minn. 

La  Follette,  Robert  M. 

Speech:  hearings  before  the  committee  on 
privileges  and  elections,  United  States 
Senate,  65th  Congress,  second  session, 
on  the  Minnesota  commission  of  public 
safety,  petition  for  proceedings  looking 
to  the  expulsion  of  Senator  Robert  M. 
La  Follette,  on  account  of  a  speech  de- 
livered before  the  Nonpartisan  league, 
at  St  Paul,  Minn.,  on  September  20, 
1917.  Washington,  [D.C.]  Government 
printing  office  1918  161p 
TS 

Contains  a  thorough  review  of  precedents,  both 
judicial  and  congressional. 

Law  and  evidence  in  Debs  case  reviewed  as 
Appeal's  great  popular  trial  closes.  Ap- 
peal to  Reason  no.   1248  Nov  1,   1919 

TS 

Debs  sentenced  for  socialist-pacifist  speech. 

Law  of  the  Debs  case;  constitutional  con- 
struction by  the  Supreme  court.  New 
York,  and  Washington,  National  civil 
liberties  bureau    [1919]   4p 

TS 


McKaig,    Ray 

Townley    mistrial.    Public    22:855-7    Aug 
9.   1919 
TS 

Reports  trial  and  conviction  of  A.  C.  Town- 
ley,  president  of  the  Non-partisan  league,  at  Jack- 
son, Minn.,  on  charge  of  conviction  to  defeat 
draft. 

McKeller,  K.  D.,  and  others 

Punishment   of   seditious   acts   and   utter- 
ances. Congressional  Record  56:5110-12 
April  6,  1918 
PAIS  '18 
Minor,  Robert 

I  got  arrested  a   little.   Liberator  2:28-38 
Dec.  1919 
TS 

Gives  account  of  arrest  in  France  for  sup- 
posed treason  as  Bolshevist  agitator,  and  much 
detail   on   treatment  of  such  offenders. 

National  civil  liberties  bureau 

Conviction  of  Mrs  Kate  Richards  O'Hare 
and  North  Dakota  politics.  New  York, 
National  civil  liberties  bureau,  70  5th 
ave.    1918    12p 

PAIS  '18 

Outrage  on  Reverend  Herbert  S.  Bigelow 
of  Cincinnati,  Ohio,  October  28,  1917. 
New  York,  National  civil  liberties  bu- 
reau, 70  5th  ave.  1918  15p 

PAIS  '18 

Nonpartisan  leaguers  are  convicted  in  farce 
trial.  Appeal  to  Reason  no.  1235  Aug 
2.   1919 

TS 

Deals  with  conviction  of  A.  C.  Townley  and 
Joseph  Gilbert. 

O'Leary,  Jeremiah,  A. 

My  political  trial  and  experiences;  in- 
cluding a  biographical  sketch  of  the 
author  by  Major  Michael  A.  Kelly  .  .  . 
with  preface  by  Joseph  W.  Gavan,  esq. 
New  York,  Jefferson  publishing  co.,  inc. 
1919  546p 

Deals  with  trial  as  pro-German  conspirator  of 
an  agitator   for  Ireland's  independence. 

Olivereau,  Louise 

Louise  Olivereau  case;  trial  and  speech 
to  the  jury  in  Federal  court,  Seattle, 
Wash.  November  1917.  .  .  .  Seattle, 
Wash.  Minnie  Parkhurst  publisher 
[1919]  64p 
TS 

Gives  also  address  of  prosecutor  and  judges 
charge  to  jury,  brief  report  of  trial  by  the  pub- 
lisher. Also  circulars  sent  by  defendant  for  the 
aid  of  conscientious  objectors. 

Overman,   Lee   Slater,    1854-,   and  others 
Punishment   of   seditious   acts   and  utter- 
ances.   Congressional    Record    56:4989- 
5002  April  4,  1918 
PAIS  '18 

Punishment   of  seditious   acts  and  utter- 
ances. Congressional  Record  56:5212-40 
April  9,   1918 
PAIS  '18 

Punishment   of   seditious  acts   and   utter- 
ances.   Congressional    Record    56:5278- 
310  April   10,   1918 
PAIS  '18 


FREE   SPEECH 


227 


Poindexter,  Miles,  and  others 

Punishment  of  seditious  acts  and  utter- 
ances. Congressional  Record  56:5143-70 
April  8,  1918 

PAIS   '18 

Seditious  acts  and  utterances;  conference 
report.  Congressional  Record  56:5944-8 
April  24,   1918 

PAIS  '18 

Sherman,  L.   Y.,  and  others 

Seditious  acts  and  utterances.  Congres- 
sional   Record    56:6714-23    May   8,    1918 

PAIS  '18 

Supreme  court  vs.  the  supreme  court.  New 
Republic  21:235-38  April  21,   1920 

TS 

A  critical  review  of  decisions  in  three  cases 
under  war  censorship,  to  illustrate  how  different 
the  judicial  mind  works  when  property  rights  are 
to  be   protected. 

Townley,  A.  C,  and  Gilbert,  Joseph 

State  of  Minnesota,  in  Supreme  court, 
1918.  [State  of  Minnesota,  plaintiff,  vs. 
A.  C.  Townley  and  Joseph  Gilbert,  de- 
fendants.] Record.  Minneapolis,  Review 
pub.  CO.,  printers  n.d.   lip 

State  of  Minnesota,  in  Supreme  court. 
[State  of  Minnesota,  plaintiff,  vs.  A.  C. 
Townley    and    Joseph    Gilbert,    defend- 


ants.] Brief  for  defendants.  Minneapolis, 
Review  pub.  co.,  printers  n.d.  53p 

Defendants  had  been  convicted  for  utterances 
alleged  to  discourage  enlistment  in  army  or  navy. 
Conviction    reversed. 

Wood,  Charles  Erskine  Scott 

Free  speech  and  the  constitution  in  the 
war being  substantially  a  re- 
print of  the  argument  against  the  con- 
stitutionality of  the  Espionage  act, 
from  the  brief  filed  in  the  Marie  Equi 
case,  no.  3328  U.  S.  Circuit  Court  of 
Appeals  ninth  circuit,  James  E.  Fenton, 
attorney.  C.  E.  S.  VVood  of  Council 
[Portland,   Oregon,    1919]    29p 

TS 

On  conventional  legal  grounds  argues  that  law 
is  unconstitutional. 

Zench.  W.  E. 

Truth  about  the  Kate  Richards  O'Hare 
case.  Appeal  to  Reason  no.  1243  Sept 
27.  1919 

This  whole  issue  is  devoted  to  showing  the 
political  motives  and  feud  to  which  Mrs  O'Hare 
became  an  incidental  victim. 

— and  O'Hare,  Kate  Richards 

Truth  about  the  O'Hare  case  by  W.  E. 
Zench;  and  Kate  Richards  O'Hare's  ad- 
dress to  the  court.  St  Louis,  Mo.,  Frank 
P.   O'Hare  n.d.    [1919]    31p 


Part  X.     Suppressed  Publications 


Alphabetical  under  author.  Includes  pub- 
lished lists  of  suppressed  books  but  does  not  re- 
list   their    contents. 

Aggiunta  all"  editto  sulla  stampa  per  quanto 
riguarda  il  Sommo  Pontefice  e-gli  In- 
viati  di  Potenze  estere  presso  la  Santa 
Sede;  ministro,  Raeli  (Grazia,  Guistizia 
e  culti)   Dec  16,  1870  Roma  1870  3p 

NY 

AUbutt,   Henry  Arthur 

The  wife's  handbook.  London.  R.  Forder 
For  publishing  this  book  Dr  Albutt  was  ad- 
judged (by  the  Royal  college  of  physicians  of 
Edinburgh  and  by  General  medical  council  of 
Great  Britain)  guilty  of  "infamous  conduct," 
and  his  name  was  erased  from  the  Medical  reg- 
ister. 

Numerous  editions. 

Anstey,  Frank 

Red  Europe.  Melbourne,  Fragcr  &  Jenkin- 
son  1919 

The  author  a  member  of  the  Australian  Par- 
liament was  imprisoned  for  this-  book.  Gives 
some   account   of    war   censorship   and   deception. 

Appeal  to   Reason    [paper].   April   29,    1911 

Caused  arrest  of  editors  and  managers  for 
"obscenity".    Federal  judge  dismissed  indictment. 

Asgill,    John,    1659-1738 

Argument  to  prove  that  death  is  not  ob- 
ligatory on  Christians;  by  the  celebra- 
ted John  Asgill,  esq.,  M.P.,  with  intro- 
ductory essay,  memoirs,  notes  and  min- 
isterial testimony  by  the  Rev  Tresham 


D.    Gregg.    New   York,    Ennis   brothers 
•       1875   9-135p 
NY 

Reproduces  resolutions  of  English  and  Irish 
Commons  for  three  separate  burnings  of  this 
book.  Case  abstracted  in:  Schroeder,  T.  Consti- 
tutional free  speech,  p3 18-22.  For  similar  case 
see:  New,  John  Fair. 

Baxter,    Richard,    1615-1691 

Paraphrase  upon  the  New  Testament. 
London  1683 

Holy  Commonwealth  or  political  aphor- 
isms opening  the  true  principles  of  gov- 
ernment. London  1659 

Burned   at   Oxford.    i68S. 

Beall,  Edgar  C. 

Life  sexual;  a  study  of  the  philosophy, 
physiology,  science,  art  and  hvgiene  of 
love.  New  York,  Vim  pub.  co.  1905  21 5p 

TS 

Belin,  Jean  Paul 

.  .  .  Commerce  des  livres  prohibes  a  Paris 

de  1750  a  1789.  Paris,  Bclin  freres.  1913 

129p 
LC 

Berliner,   A. 

Censur  und  confiscation  hebraischer 
biichcr  im  kirchenstaate;  auf  grund  der 
inquisitions-akten  in  der  vaticana  und 
vallicellana  dargestellt.  Frankfort  a  M. 
1891 


228 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Berrier,   Leroy 

Creative  force  and  sexual  natures.  Twen- 
tieth  degree  book.   Minneapolis,   Minn., 
Author's    publishing    club    1897 
TS 

First  lessons  in  sexual  science;  a  treat- 
ise that  solves  the  greatest  problems  of 
the  age — the  control  and  limitation  of 
offspring.  Minneapolis,  Minn.,  Authors' 
publishing  club  1897  7-61p 
TS 

Procreation    and    love    .  .  .    Minneapolis, 
Minn.    Authors'   publishing   co.    1897    7- 
48p 
TS 

Procreation  and  love,  sexual  science  and 
ethics    Minneapolis,   Minn.,   Sexual  sci- 
ence and  purity  club  1896  55p 
TS 

Sexuality  and  its  functions.  ***  Minne- 
apolis, Minn.  Sexual  science  and  purity 
club?   1894? 

Best,  Paul,  1590-1657 

Best  submitted  his  opinions  of  vinitarian  the- 
ology, in  document  form,  to  a  friend.  The  docu- 
ment was  turned  over  to  the  authorities  as  blas- 
phemous and  Best  was  imprisoned  for  a  number 
of  years. 

Betten,   Francis    Sales,    1863- 

Roman  index  of  forbidden  books  briefly 
explained  for  Catholic  booklovers  and 
students;  with  a  summary  of  the  index. 
St   Louis,    B.    Herder    1909  69p 

LC 

Beverlandus,  Hadrianus 

De  peccatum  originale.  Utrecht?   1679 

This  work  was  ordered  to  be  burnt,  the  author 
being  fined  by  the  University  of  Leyden  and 
afterwards  banished  from  Utrecht  on  account  of 
the   obscenity  of  his  writings. 

Bible;   quotations   from   suppressed 

For  information  see  Schroeder,  T.  "Obscene" 
literature  and  constitutional  law.  P65-6;   310-11. 

Bibliotheca  arcana;  sen,  Catalogus  lib- 
rorum  penetralium;  being  brief  notices 
of  books  that  have  been  secretly  print- 
ed, prohibited  by  law,  seized,  anathema- 
tised, burnt  or  bowdlerised;  by  Spec- 
ulator morum.  London,  G.  Redway  1885 
xxii,141,xxvp 

LC  NY 

Bibliotheca   scatologica.    (Paris    1850) 

Biddle,  John,  1615-1662 

Twelve  questions  or  arguments  drawn  out 
of  Scripture,  wherein  the  commonly  re- 
ceived opinion  touching  the  Deity  of 
the  Holy  Spirit  is  clearly  and  fully  re- 
futed. 1647 

Ordered  burnt  by  the  hangman  and  Biddle 
imprisoned     for     five     years. 

Birth  Control  Review.  Aug,  1918 

Suppressed  because  of  advertisement  of  Mar- 
ried love,   by  Marie  E.   Stopes. 

The  Blast,  vol.  1,  no.  15.  July  1,  1916 
TS 

Publishes  notice  of  hearing  for  depriving  paper 
of  postal  privilege.  Was  suppressed  by  postal 
censor.  Was  devoted  to  anarchism  and  indus- 
trial agitation. 


Blount,  Charles,  1654-1693 
Anima  mundi.  1675 

Ordered     suppressed     by 
Later    publicly    burnt. 


shop     of     London. 


King    William     and     Queen     Mary     con- 
querors. 

This  was  published  anonymously,  so  the  House 
of  commons  proceeded  against  the  licenser,  re- 
moved him  from  office,  and  ordered  the  book 
burnt. 

Life  of  Apolonius  Tyaneus.  1680 
Reasons  for  liberty  of  unlicensed  printing. 
1693 

Bolshevism  and  the  Methodist  church;  an 
account  of  the  controversy  precipated 
by  Professor  Ward.  Current  Opinion 
66:380-1  June,  1919 

Deals  with  temporary  suppression  of  some  of 
Professor  Harry  F.  Ward's  books. 

Borsenverein  der  deutschen  buchhandler 

Verzeichnis    der    verbotenen    biicher    und 
zeitschriften    1903   bis    ende    marz    1914. 
Leipzig,     Borsenverein     der     deutschen 
buchhandler   1914  78p 
LC 

Boudinhon, 

Nouvelles    regies    sur   I'interdiction    ot   la 
censure    des    livres.    Can    Contemp    p20 
1897 
PAR 

Bourdeille,   Pierre   de 

Lives    of    fair    and    gallant    ladies.    Paris, 
privately   printed    1901   914p 

Bradford,  A.  B. 

How  do  marsupial  animals  propagate  their 
kind?    (In:    Eight    scientific    tracts.    7p 
Liberal  and  scientific  publishing  house 
1876) 
TS 

For  this  book  D.  M.  Bennett  was  arrested,  by 
Anthony   Comstock. 

Bradlaugh,  Charles,  and  Besant,  Annie 

Fruits    of    philosophy;    a    treatise    on    the 
population    question.    Garden    City   pub- 
lishing   [1876?]    22p 
TS 

The  real  author  was  Charles  Knowlton.  Pref- 
ace tells  of  its  various  previous  publications, 
arrest  of  Watts  and  his  plea  of  guilty.  Now  re- 
published to  make  test  case.  See:  Law  Reports, 
Queens  Bench  Division  3:607,  where  conviction 
reversed  on  a  technicality. 

[Brunet,    Gustave]     i.    e.    Pierre    Gustave, 

1807-1896 
Livres  cartonnes;  essais  bibliographiques; 
par   Philomneste   junior    fpseud.]    Brus- 
sels,  Gay  &   Douce   1878   lOlp 
LC  NY 

Bruno,  Guide 

Edna:  The  girl  of  the  street 
Why    I    wear    men's    clothes.    Pearson's 
Magazine   39:198-206   Aug,    1918 
TS 

For  this  story  the  magazine  was  excluded  from 
the  mails  as  "obscene." 

Burton,  Henry 

Babel    no   Bethel. 

Author    imprisoned    and    book    suppressed. 


FREE  SPEECH 


229 


Plea  to  an  appeal. 

Pouring    out    of    the    seven    vials.     1628 

Suppressed    and    author   prosecuted. 

Trial  of  private  devotions.  1628 

Butler,  George  F. 

Love    and    its    affinities.    Chicago,    G.    P. 
Engelhard  &  co.   1899  133p 
TS 

Declared  unmailable  at  Chicago,  as  "obscene." 
Stockyard  puritanism  could  not  stand  being  dis- 
sected. 

Cabanas, 

Curious  bypaths  of  history;  a  series  of 
studies  and  researches.  Paris  1898  391p 

Caine.  Hall 

Woman  thou  gavest  mc.  Philadelphia,  Lip- 
pincott  1913  584p 

Carr.   W.   P. 

Plastic  operation  for  restoring  the  scro- 
tum;  with   report  of  a   case.  American 
Journal  of  Dermatology  15:292-6  June, 
1911 
TS 

The  June,  191 1,  number  the  American  Journal 
of  Dermatology  was  excluded  from  the  mails  be- 
cause of  the  illustrations  in  the  above  article. 

Catalogue  alphabetique  des  ouvrages  con- 
damnes,  ou  releve  de  toutes  Ics  publi- 
cations officielles  faites  au  Moniteur,  en 
execution  de  la  loi  du  26  niai  1819, 
suivi  d'un  memento  des  parquets.  Paris. 
Au  bureau  du  Journal  du  palais  1836 
74,38p 

LC 

Catalogue  des  ecrits,  gravures  et  dessins 
condamnes  dcpuis  1814  jusqu'au  Icr  Jan- 
vier 1850;  suivi  de  la  liste  des  individus 
condamnes  pour  delits  de  presse.  Paris, 
Pillet  fils  aine  1850  202p 

Y 

Catalogue  des  ouvrages  qui  ont  etc  I'objet 
soit  de  condamnations,  soit  de  pour- 
suites  judiciaircs,  depuis  1814  jusqu'au 
ler  Janvier  1843.  Paris,  P.  Dupont  1843 
86p 

Y 

Cate,   Chester  M. 

De  Bry  and  the  Index  expurgatorius. 
Bibliographical  Society  of  America  11: 
136-40    July,    1917 

Chidley,  W.  J. 

The    answer.    Melbourne.    Australian    au- 
thor's agency  1911  9-79p 
TS 

First  edition  ordered  burnt.  Revised  editions 
resulted  in  several  more  arrests  and  a  temporary 
incarceration  in  lunatic  asylum.  See:  Case  of 
Chidley  discussed  in  Parliament. 

Clark,  William  Lloyd,  1869- 

Dcvil's  prayer  book;  or.  An  exposure  of 
auricular  confession  as  practised  in  the 
Catholic  church.  The  author,  Milan,  Til. 
1911  64p 

For  selling  this  book  Joseph  Slattcry,  an  ex- 
Catholic  priest,  was  arrested,  but  never  tried,  and 
his  bond  never  collected.  Pittsburgh,  Pa..  Nov. 
1891. 


Clarkson   (or  Claxton)   Laurance 

Single  eye,  all  light  no  darkness,  or  light 
and  darkness  one.   1650  16p 

For   this  the  author  was  banished. 

Clendon,  John 

Tractatus      philosophico-theologicus      de 
persona;  or  a  treatise  of  the  word  per- 
son. London   1710 
Clifford,  J.   R. 

I  shall  introduce  him.  Pioneer  Press  June 
3.    1899 
TS 

This  reflects  on  the  chastity  of  Rev  J.  C. 
Newman,  and  thereon  the  author-editor  was  con- 
victed. See  United  States  v.  Clifford.  Federal 
Reporter   104:296. 

Combe,   George,    1788-1858 

Suppressed  documents;  or.  An  appeal  to 
the  public  against  the  conductors  of  the 
Scottish  Guardian.  Glasgow,  J.  McLeod 
1836  14p 
NY 

Coffin,  Charles  C. 
Story  of  liberty. 

This  is  the  scarce  first  issue  containing  the 
chapters  on  the  Roman  Catholic  church,  sup- 
pressed in  later  issues. 

Craddock,  Ida  C. 

This  woman  was  arrested  in  Denver,  Chicago, 
Washington,  D.C.  and  twice  in  New  York  City. 
Last  time  suicided  to  avoid  jail  sentence.  See: 
Schroeder,  T.  "Obscene"  literature  and  constitu- 
tional law,  P58-9. 


Letter  to  a  prospective  bride.  2d  ed  New 
York,   The  author   1898   18p 


TS 

Right  mai^Jal   living.  4th   ed    New   York, 
The  author  1901  44p 
TS 

Wedding  night.  3d  ed  New  York.  The  au- 
thor 1902  24p 
TS 
Crane,   Arthur 

Great  exorcism.  San  Francisco,  A.  Crane, 
1278   Market   st.    1915   70p 

Suppressed  because  of  the  mystical  healing, 
thought  to  constitute  a  fraud  by  the  postal  au- 
thorities. 

Current  Opinion    [magazine.]    Dec,    1918 
TS 

Suppressed  because  of  article  New  approach  to 
the  solution  of  sex  difficulties,  a  review  of  Dr 
Marie  Slope's  book.  Married  love.  Magazine  sub- 
sequently released  because  publisher's  name  not 
given. 

D'Aurevilly,   Jules   Barbey 

Weird  women;  a  scries  of  six  marvellous 
stories.   Paris   1900  2v 
Defoe,  Daniel,   1661-1731 

Shortest  way  with  Dissenters.  1702 

Delaime,  Thomas 

Plea  for  the  nonconformists.  1683 
Delaune  and  his   family  died  in  prison. 

Douglas,   R.   B. 

Life  of  Sophie  Arnould,  the  beautiful  act- 
ress and  witty-tongued  courtesan,  re- 
counting her  a!fniours,  intrigues,  es- 
capades, gay  frolics,  and  liasons  with 
famous  men.   Paris   1898 


230 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Drujon,  Fernand,  1845- 

Bibliographie    des   ouvrages    relatifs    a   1'- 

armour,  aux  femmcs,  au  mariage 
Catalogue  des  ouvrages,  ecrits  et  dcssins 
et  tout  nature  poursuivis,  supprimes  ou 
condamnes  depuis  le  21  octobre  1814 
jusqu'au  31  juillct  1877;  edition  entierc- 
mcnt  nouvellc,  considerablemcnt  augm., 
suivi  de  la  table  des  nonis  d'autcurs  et 
d'editeurs  et  accompagnee  de  notes  bib- 
liographiqucs  et  analytiques.  Paris,  fi. 
Rouvcyre   1879  xxxvii,430p 

LC  Y 

Duro,  Cesareo  Fernandez 

Catalogo  sucinto  de  censuras  de  obras 
manuscritas,  pedidas  por  el  consejo  a 
la  real  academia  de  la  historia  antes  de 
acordar  las  licencias  de  impresion. 
Boletin  de  la  Real  Academia  de  la  His- 
toria 35:369-434   1899 

Dusberrie,   W. 
Mightly  day  of  the  Lord. 

A  man  was  once  fined  £io  for  merely  having 
a   copy   of   this   in   his    possession. 

Eaton,  Daniel 

Ecce  homo;  or,  A  critical  enquiry  into 
the  history  of  Jesus  Christ,  being  a 
rational  analysis  of  the  gospels.  2d  ed 
1813 

Author  was  imprisoned  two  years  and  fined 
£200  for  writing  this  book,  which  was  ordered 
to  be  burnt  by  the  common  hangman. 

Ellis,   Havelock 

Studies  in  the  psychology  of  sex.  6v  Phila- 
delphia, F.  A.   Davis  co.   1903 
TS 

Suppressed  in  England  as  "obscene;"  the  Ger- 
man edition  is  denied  admission  into  the  U.S., 
and  prosecutions  have  occurred  in  the  U.S.  when 
sold  to  laymen. 

Facetiae;  one  hundred  merrie  and  delight- 
some stories:  being  a  complete  and  un- 
expurgated  translation  of  Lcs  cent  nou- 
velles  rv»uit«it«s.   Paris    1905  2v 

Fanny  Hill. 

A  much  suppressed  book  of  fiction.  Has  been 
known    to    sell    for    $40. 

Farmer,  C.  E. 

(comp.)  How  the  saloons  helped  to  trap 
a  lovely  girl;  written  by  the  girl.  Do 
saloons  pay  the  taxes?  For  business 
men  and  others.  Fort  Worth,  Texas, 
The  author  12p 
TS 

Republished  from  the  Sentinel,  March  4,  191 1. 
On  first  publication  was  arrested  for  sending 
"obscenity"  by  mail.  Federal  Judge  E.  R.  Meek 
held  the  article  to  be  "obscene"  as  a  matter  of 
law.  Later  the  jury  overruled  him  as  a  matter 
of  fact  and  acquitted. 

Farrer,   James   Anson,    1849- 

Books   condemned  to  be  burnt.   London, 

E.  Stock;  New  York,  A.  C.  Armstrong 

&  CO.  1892  xi,206p 
LC  NY  TS  Y 

Gives  much  exact  historical  data. 

Faulkner.  T.  A. 

From     the     ballroom     to     hell.     Chicago, 
Henry  brothers  &  co.  1894  61p 
TS 

See:  Schroeder,  T.  "Obscene"  literature  and 
constitutional  law,  p(i3. 


[Fernandez  del  Castillo,  Francisco] 

(ed.)    .  .  .    Libros   y   libreros   en   el   siglo 
XVI.  Mexico,  Guerrero  hnos.  1914  608p 
LC 
Flaubert,    Gustave,    1821-1880 

Madame  Bovary;  a  tale  of  provincial  life; 
tr.    from    the    French.    Philadelphia,    T, 
B.  Peterson   &  brothers   [1881]    19-384p 
LC 

Appended  is  the  Trial  of  the  author  for  writ- 
ing the  book,  before  the  Correctional  tribunal, 
Paris,  with  the  speeches  for  the  prosecution  and 
defence   and   the   judgment. 

—Same.   Paris   19U2  468p 

Y 

—Same.   Paris   1903  468p 

Y 

Foote.  Edward  Bliss,  1829-1906 

Confidential    pamphlet    for    the    married; 
words  in  pearl  for  married  people  only 
.  .  .   New  York.   The  author   1870 
TS 

Author  convicted  of  "obscenity".   See:   United 
States     V.     Foote,     Blatchford     Reports     13:418; 
Federal  Cases  no.  15128. 
Flash  lights.  New  York,  Murray  Hill  pub. 
CO.  n.d. 

After  many  years  of  circulation  this  was  denied 
mails  as  being  "obscene".  Its  contents  are  chap- 
ters from:  Dr  Foote's  Home  cyclopedia  of  popu- 
lar, medical,  social  and  sexual  science. 

Forel,  Auguste  Henry 

Sexual  question;  a  scientific,  psycholog- 
ical study.  New  York,  Rebman  co. 
[cl908] 

For  vending  this  book  several  persons  have 
been  prosecuted  as  criminals. 

Fowler,   Sadie    Bailey 

Irene.    [Philadelphia?]    [1888?] 

Suppressed  in  Philadelphia  in   1888  or  9. 

France,   Hector 

Chastisement  of  Mansour.  Paris  1898  270p 

Eraser,  John  F. 

At  last!  the  successful  man  does  the  right 
thing  at  the  right  time.  [New  York, 
The  author]   n.d.   15p 

TS 

Pamphlet  suppressed  because  of  notice  of  book 
"Science    of  man";    later  held  not   "obscene." 

Fraxi.   Pisanus 

Catena  librorum  taccndorum.  London, 
Privately  printed   1885 

Centuria  librorum  abscondkorum.  Lon- 
don,   Privately  printed   1879 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum.  London, 
Privately   printed    1877 

Fry,  John 

Accuser  ashamed;  or  a  pair  of  bellows 
to  blow  ofif  that  dust  cast  upon  John 
Fry  a  member  of  Parliament.  London 
1648 

Clergy  in  their  colors;  or  a  brief  charac- 
ter of  them.   London   1650  60p 

For  these  Fry  was  "disabled  to  sit  as  a  mem- 
ber of  the  House"  and  the  books  were  ordered 
burned. 

Gautereaux,  Standley 

Woman,  1  love  you!  San  Francisco,  The 
author    1907    171p 

For  this  Gautereaux  received  a  short  prison 
sentence  in  United  States  Court,  California. 


FREE  SPEECH 


231 


Gay,  Jean,  1837- 
Saisie  de  livres  prohibes  faitc  aux  con- 
vents des  Jacobins  et  des  Cordeliers  a 
Lj'on,  en  1694;  nouv.  ed.,  augm.  d'un 
repertoire  bibliographique.  Turin  1876 
88p 

LC 

Glasgow,  J.  W. 

Personal  purity  and  sexual  science.  9th  ed 
Hvanston,  111.,  J.  W.  Glasgow  1911  l()8p 

TS 

Gl3m,    Elinor 

Diary  of  a  lost  one 

Good  book  which,  under  the  law,  as  laid 
down  in  the  Watson  case,  can  never 
again  circulate  to  the  bcnetit  of  young 
men.  The  Jeffersonian  12:6  Dec.  9,  1915 
Watson  [Thomas]  had  been  arrested  for  "ob- 
scenity" in  publishing  translation  of  Romanist 
literature. 

Goodman,  Daniel  Carson 

Hagar  Revelly.  New  York,  Mitchell  Ken- 
nerley    1913  428p 
TS 

Pages  I68-I7S,  178,  199.  208,  214,  216,  219,  229, 
-31.  233.  235,  237.  240,  243.  244,  24s,  246,  were 
declared  "obscene."  See:  Case  of  Hagar  Revelly. 
Cleary,   William,   publisher  acquitted. 

Grannis,  Elizabeth 

Church  Union   [magazine].  June,   1895 
TS 

Suppressed  for  lottery  scheme  to  secure  sub- 
scribers. 

Greg,   P. 

History  of  the  U.S.  from  the  foundation 
of  Virginia  to  the  reconstruction  of  the 
Union.   Richmond  1892 

Reported  suppressed  because  of  his  views  on 
the  Revolution  and  the  Civil  war. 

Hall,  Joseph 

Sober  reply  to  Mr  Higg's  merry  argu- 
ments from  the  light  of  nature  for  the 
tritheistic  doctrine  of  the  Trinity,  with 
a  postscript  relating  to  the  Rev  Dr 
Waterland. 

Last  work  to  J)e  burnt  as  an  offence  against 
religion,    w  I"  tf  .a 

[Hapgood,  Hutchins] 

Story  of  a  lover.  New  York,  Boni  &  Live- 
•    right    1919 
Harland,    Robert    O. 

Vice  bondage  of  a  great  city;  or,  The 
wickedest  city  in  the  world;  the  reign 
of  vice,  graft  and  political  corruption. 
Chicago,  Young  people's  civic  league 
1912  200p 
TS 

Suppressed  by  Chicago  authorities  as  "ob- 
scene",   1913- 

Hart,   Francis   B. 

Serious  charges  against  the  Supreme  court 
of  Minnesota;  grievances  set  forth  as 
cause  for  impeachment;  attorney  Hart 
cites  decisions  and  demands  inquiry 
whether  they  create  just  cause  for  im- 
peachment proceedings.  St  Paul  Dis- 
patch Dec  9,  1907  pi  and  12 
TS 

For  this  criticism  of  the  Supreme  Court  Hart 
was  punished.  See:  Northwestern  Reporter  it6: 
212,  for  decision.  See,  subdivision:  Personal 
herein   for  briefs. 


Hart,  WUliam,  d.   1888 

.  .  .  Index  expurgatorius  anglicanus;  or, 
A  descriptive  catalogue  of  the  principal 
books  printed  or  published  in  England, 
which  have  been  suppressed,  or  burnt 
by  the  common  hangman,  or  censured, 
or  for  which  the  authors,  printers,  or 
publishers  have  been  prosecuted.  Lon- 
don. J.  R.  Smith  1872-78  290p 

LC  Y 

Haym,   Hugo 

Bibliotheca  erotica  ct  curiosa  Monacensis. 

Berlin    1889 
Bibliotheca  germanorum  erotica.  Leipzig, 

1885 

Hasmes,  Edmund  Sidney  Pollock,   1877- 
Taboos    of    the    British    museum    library. 
English    Review    16:123-34   Dec,    1913 
RGS    '07-15 

Gives  specific  information  of  library  censor- 
ship and  criticizes  the  same. 

Heckethom,   Charles   William 

Printers  of  Basle  in  the  XV  &  XVI  cen- 
turies: their  biographies,  printed  books 
and  devices.  London,  T.  F.  Unwin  1897 
208p 

Pages  72  3  tell  of  suppression  by  Lutherans 
of  The   book    of   the   sacrament,   by   Carolstadius. 

Henderson,  William   C, 

New  England  Cupid,  [magazine]  Feb  and 
March,   1898 

Heyl.  Carl,   1882- 

Das    indexrecht   .  .  .   Wurzburg    1909  81p 
Y 

Heywood,  Ezra  H. 

Cupid's  yokes;  or.  The  binding  forces  of 
conjugal  life;  an  essay  to  consider  some 
moral  and  physiological  phases  of  love 
and  marriage,  wherein  is  asserted  the 
natural  right  and  necessity  of  sexual 
self-government.  Princeton,  Mass.,  Co- 
operative pub.  CO.   1879  23p 

TS 

Basis  of  numerous  prosecutions  with  varying 
results.  See  Schroeder,  T.  "Obscene"  literature 
and  constitutional  law,  P312-13;  also  American 
Journal  of  Eugenics  1Q07;  Albany  Law  Journal, 
Aug.    1908. 

Hilgers,   Joseph,    1858- 

Index    der    verbotenen    bucher.    Freiburg 

im    Breisgau,    Herdersche   verlagshand- 

lung  1904  xxi,638p 
LC  Y 

Hollick,  F. 

Marriage  guide;  or.  Physiological  and 
hygienic  instructor  .  .  .  500th  ed  New 
York.  American  news  co.  1901  xv.406p 

TS 

For  advertising  this  and  similar  books  by  same 
author,  in  1908.  one  G.  H.  W.  Bates  of  Boston 
was  arrested.  A  compromise  was  effected  and 
publicity  avoided  by  plea  of  guilty  and  discon- 
tinuance of  sale. 

Hopkins,  Prince 

More  Prussian  than  Prussia?  A  survey  of 
.\merican  conditions,  n.p.,  n.d.  280p 


TS 


For  this  author  arrested  under  war  censorship. 


232 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Houston,    George 

Ecce  homo!  or,  A  critical  inquiry  into  the 
history  of  Jesus  of  Nazareth;  being  a 
rational  analysis  of  the  gospels.  New 
York  1827 

The  first  English  edition  was  published  anon- 
omously  in  i7qq;  the  second  in  1813.  The  latter 
resulted  in  two  years  imprisonment  and  a  fine 
of  20o£.  See  Schroeder,  T.  Constitutional  free 
speech  defined  and  defended,  P347,  for  an  ac- 
count   of    its    suppression    as    blasphemous. 

— Same.    2d    ed    London,    G.    Houston    1813 

Houghes,   Marion 

The  Dam  family.  .  .  .  The  doings  of  the 
Dams,  the  devils  demagogues,  under 
the  domes  of  anti-democracy,  and  polit- 
ical pot-pie  well  spiced  and  trimmed, 
ready  to  serve.  AI.  A.  Donohue  &  co. 
1905  96p 
TS 

A  severe  _  arraignment  of  the  government's 
economic  legislation.  Suppressed  by  government 
agents  threat  to  prosecute.  Thurland  &  Thur- 
land,  booksellers,  Evanston,  111. 

Hurley,  Timothy 

Commentary  on  the  present  index  legis- 
lation .  .  .  with  a  preface  by  the  Most 
Rev  Dr  Clancy  .  .  .  New  York,  Cincin- 
nati [etc.]  Benziger  brothers  1908  xx, 
252p 
Y 
Hurt,   Walter 

Gattling   Gun    [paper].   July,    1899 
II  Martello   (periodical.)   July  20,  1919 

This  made  the  sixth  issue  of  the  radical  Italian 
weekly  to  be  debarred  from  the  mails. 

Importancia  de  la  prohibicion  de  malos  lib- 
ros,  esplanada  en  la  defense  que  ha 
hecho  de  los  Sres.  obispos,  asi  sobre 
este,  como  sobre  otros  puntos  propias 
de  su  juris  diccion,  un  literato  oculto 
bajo  el  nombre  de:  El  retirado;  6  sea 
Copia  de  las  cartas  que  con  dicha  firma 
se  han  dado  en  el  Registro  oficial  de 
esta  ciudad.  ^Mexico,  A.  Valdes  1832  3- 
87p 

LC 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum 

Catalogi  librorum  reprobatorum  &  praele- 
gendoru  ex  iudicio  Academiae  Louan- 
iensis;  cum  edicto  Caesarese  Maiestatis 
euulgati.  Pinciae,  Ex  officina  Francis 
Ferdi.  Cordubcn  1551  [New  York,  De 
Vinne    press    1895?]    [24]p 

LC 

Catalogus  librorum  a  Commissione  caes. 
reg.  aulica  prohibitorum;  cum  supple- 
mentis  usque  ad  annum  1780.  [Viennae 
1781?]    318p 

LC 

Catalogus  librorum  reprobatorum  ex  iud- 
icio Academiae  Lovaniensis  cum  edicto 
caesareae  maiestatis  euulgatus;  extra- 
vagans  sanctissimi  domini  nostri,  D. 
lulij  papae  tertij  contra  tenentes  sen 
legetes  libros  prohibitos  vel  reprobates. 
[New  York,  De  Vinne  press  1895?] 
r32]p 

LC  Y 

The  Louvain  Index  of  isso  was  sent  by 
Charles  V  to  the  Inquisitor-General  Fernando  de 


Valdes.  with  instructions  that  it  should  be 
printed  in  Spain.  Of  this,  several  reprints, 
known  as  the  first  Valdes  Index,  were  issued  in 
Spain  in  1551,  from  Valencia,  Toledo  and  Val- 
ladolid. 

Cathalogus  librorri,  qui  prohibetur  man- 
date illustrissimi  &  reverend  D.  D. 
Ferdinandi  de  Valdes  Hispalen.  .  .  . 
hoc  anno  MDLIX  editus.  Quorum  iussu 
&  licentia  Sebastianus  Martinez  excude- 
bat  Pinciae.  [New  York,  De  Vinne 
press  1895?]  facsim.:27  (i.e.  72)p 
LC  Y 

Cathalogus  librorum  haereticorum;  qui 
hactenus  coligi  potuerut  a  uiris  cath- 
olicis,  supplcndus  in  dies,  si  qui  alii  ad 
notitiam  deuenerint,  de  commissione 
tribunalis,  sanctissimae  inquisitionis 
Venetiarum.  Venetiis  apud  G.  lulitum 
de  Ferraris  &  fratres  1554  [33]p 
LC   Y 

Censura  generalis  contra  errores,  quib 
recentes  haeretici  scripturam  asperse- 
runt,  edita  a  supremo  senatu  Inquisi- 
tionis adversus  hereticam  prauitatem 
&  apostasiam  in  Hispania,  &  aliis  reg- 
nis.  &  dominiis  Cesareae  Magestatis 
constitute.  Pinciae,  Ex  officina  Francis 
Ferdinan.  Corduben.  .  .  .  [New  York, 
De  Vinne  press  1895?]  facsim.:  [54]p 
LC  Y 

Index  auctorum,  et  libroru,  qui  ab  offi- 
cio Sanct?e  Rom.  et  Universalis  inquisi- 
tionis caueri  ab  omnibus  et  singulis  in 
universa  Christiana  republica  mandatur 
.  .  .  Romae,  Apud  Antonium  Bladum 
1559  [69]p 


Index  et  catalogus  librorum  prohibitorum, 
mandato  illustriss.  ac  reverediss.  D.  D. 
Gasparis  A  Quiroga  .  .  .  ac  in  regnis 
Hispaniarum  generalis  inquisitoris, 
denuo  editus  .  .  .  Madriti,  Apud  Alphon- 
sum  Gomezium  1583  96p 
Y 

Index  expurgatorius  librorum  qui  hoc 
seculo  prodierunt,  vel  doctrinae  non 
sanae  erroribus  inspersis,  vel  inutilis  & 
offensiuae  malcdicentiae  fcllibus  per- 
mixtis,  iuxtra  sacri  Concilii  tridentini 
decretum;  Philippi  II  regis  catholic! 
iussu  &  auctoritate,  atque  Albani  ducis 
consilio  ac  ministerio  in  Belgia  con- 
cinnatus,  anno  MDLXXI.  Antverpiae, 
Ex  officina   C.  Plantini   1571    104p 

LC 

— Same.  Accesserunt  huic  editioni  Excerpta 
aliorum  librorum  expurgatorum,  qui  in 
indice  hoc  belgico  desiderabantur,  ex 
indice  hispanico,  illustrissimi  ac  rever- 
endissimi  D.  D.  Gasparis  Quiroga  .  .  . 
iuxtra  exemplar,  quod  typis  mandatum 
est  Madriti,  apud  Alphonsum  Gomezium 
.  .  .  anno  MDLXXXIV  .  .  .  Argen- 
torati,  Impensis  L.  Zetzneri  1609  449p, 
451-521p 

LC 


FREE  SPEECH 


233 


Index  librorvm  cxpurgatorum,  illustris- 
simi  ac  reverendis.  D.  D.  Gasparis  Qui- 
roga  .  .  .  iussu  editus  .  .  .  iuxta  exem- 
plar, quod  typis  mandatum  est  Madriti, 
apud  Alphonsum  Gomezium  .  .  .  anno 
MDLXXXIIII  [i.e.  1584]  Salnivri,  Apud 
Thomam  Portav  1601   158p 

LC 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum  a  Sixto  V, 
papa,  confectus  et  publicatus:  at  vero 
a  successoribus  ejus  in  sede  romana 
suppressus;  edente  Josepho  Mendham. 
Londini,  Apud  Jacobum  Duncan  1835 
46p 

LC 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum  Alcxandri 
VII,  pontificis  maximi;  iussu  editus  .  .  . 
Romae,  Ex  typographia  Rev.  cam. 
apost.   1667  304p 

LC  Y 

Index  librorum  prohibitum;  auctoritate 
Pii  IV,  primuni  editus;  postea  vero  a 
Sixto  V  auctus;  et  nunc  demuni  S.  D. 
N.  dementis  papae  VI 11  iussu  rccog- 
nitus,  &  publicatus;  additis  regulis,  ac 
exequendse  prohibitionis  ratione.  Col- 
oniae,  Sumptibus  B.  Gualtheri  1621  123p 
LC 

Ein  Index  librorum  prohibitorum  aus  den 
dreissiger  jahren  dieses  jahrhunderts 
mitgetheilt.  (In:  Neucr  Anzeiger  fiir 
Bibliographie  und  Bibliothekwisscn- 
schaft.   1880  p7-10) 

Index    librorum    prohibitorum    Clcmentis 
X,      pontificis      maximi      iussu      editus. 
Romae,     Ex     Typographia     Reu.     cam. 
apost.   1670  xxiv,333p 
LC 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum,  cum  regulis 
confectis  per  patres  a  Tridentina  synodo 
delectos,  auctoritate  sanctiss.  D.  N.  Pij. 
IIII  Pont.  Max.  comprobatus;  cum  ap- 
pendice  in  belgio  ex  mandate  Regiae 
Cathol.  Maiestatis  confecta  .  .  .  .-\ntvcr- 
pi<-e,  Ex  ofticina  Christophori  Plantini 
1570  108p 
LC 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum  cum  regulis 
confectis  per  patres  a  Tridentina 
synodo  delectos;  auctoritate  Pii  HIT 
primum  editus:  postea  vero  a  Syxto  V 
auctus,  et  nunc  domum  A.  D.  N.  de- 
mentis papae  VIII  iussu  recognitus,  & 
publicatus.  Coloniae,  Apud  G.  Cholinum 
1598  55p 
LC  Y 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum  et  cxpurga- 
torum III.  ac  R.  D.  D.  Bernardi  de  San- 
doval et  Roxas  .  .  .  Madriti.  L.  Sanchez 
1612  739p 


Index  librorum  prohibitorum  et  cxpurgan- 
dum  novissimus:  pro  catholicis  His- 
paniarum  rcgnis  Pliilippi  IV  ...  An- 
tonii  a  Sotomaior  .  .  .  jussu  ac  studiis. 


luculenter    &    vigilantissime    recognitus 
.  .  .    Madriti,    Ex    Typographia    Didaci 
Diaz   1667  xxxi,[104],992p 
LC  Y 

Index    librorum    prohibitorum    Innocentii 
XI,     pontificis     maximi     iussu     editus. 
Romae,     Ex     Typographia     reu.     cam. 
apost.    1681    xxvi,296p 
LC 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum  Innocentii 
tSo,  ^-  ^^-  '"^^"  editus  usque  ad  annum 
1681;  eidem  accedit  in  fine  appendix 
usque  ad  mensem  junii  1704;  juxta  ex- 
emplar romanum.  Pragae,  Apud  Joseph- 
um  A.  Schilhart  1726  41  Ip 
LC 

—Appendix  novissima  ad  Indecem  librorum 
prohibitorum  ab  anno  MDCCIV  usque 
ad  totum  mensem  martii  MDCCXVI 
juxta  exemplar  romanum.  Recusa  Vet- 
ero-Pragae.  Apud  Josephum  A.  Schil- 
hart  [1726]   72p 

LC 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum  juxta  ex- 
emplar romanum  jussu  sanctissimi 
domini  nostri  editum  anno  MDCCC- 
XXXV;  accesserunt  suis  locis  nomina 
eorum  qui  usque  ad  banc  diem  damnati 
fuere.  Mechliniac,  H.  Dessain  1855  xlix, 
370p 
LC 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum  Leonis  XIII 
sum.  pont.  auctoritate  recognitus  SS. 
D.  N.  Pii  P.  X.  iussu  editus;  praemit- 
tuntur  constitutiones  apostolicae  de  ex- 
amine et  prohibitione  librorum.  Romae, 
Typis  vaticanis  1904  xxiii,317p 
LC 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum  SSmi  D.  X. 
Benedicti  XIV,  pontificis  maximi  jussu 
recognitus  atque  editus.  Romae,  Ex 
typographia  Reverendae  camerae  apos- 
tolicae 1758  xxxvi,304p 
LC  Y 

— Same.  Romae,  Ex  typographia  Reverendae 
camerae  apostolicae  1758  xxxix,268p 
Index  librorum  prohibitorum  sanctissimi 
domini  nostri  Pii  Sexti  pontificis  max- 
imi jussu  editus.  Romae,  Ex  typogra- 
phia Reverendae  camerae  apostolicae 
1786  vii-xliv,323p 

LC 

— Appendix  in  qua  rcccnscntur  libri  pro- 
scripti  anno  MDCCLXXXVI;  usque  ad 
diem  2  augusti  anni  MDCCXC.  [Romae, 
Ex  typographia  Reverendae  camerae 
apostolicae   1790]    6p 

LC 

— Appendix  in  qua  recensentur  libri  pro- 
scripti  ab  anno  MDCCXC  usque  ad  diem 
11  januarii  anni  MDCCXCVI.  [Romae, 
Ex  typographia  Reverendae  camerae 
apostolicae   1796]    5p 

LC  NY? 


234 


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Index  librorum  prohibitorum  SSmi  D.  N. 
Benedicti  XIV  pontilicis  maximi  jussu 
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huius  editionis  appendicibus  librorum 
novissime  prohibitorum.  Parmae,  Apud 
P.  Carmignani  1783  315p 

LC 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum  sanctissimi 
domini  nostri  Gregorii  XVI,  pontiticis 
maximi  jussu  editus.  Romae,  Ex  typo- 
graphia  Reverendae  camerae  apostolicae 
1835   xlviii,405p 

LC 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum  ss.  domini 
nostri  Gregorii  XVI  pontificis  maximi 
jussu  editus,  Romae  MDCCCXLI. 
Monteregali,  P.  Rossi  1852  470p 

LC  Y 

—Same.  Romae,  Ex  typographia  Rever- 
endae camerae  apostolicae  1841  xlviii, 
422p 

LC  Y 
Index  librorum  prohibitorum  sanctissimi 
domini  nostri  Leonis  XIII  pont.  max. 
iussu  editus;  editio  novissima  in  qua 
libri  omnes  ab  Apostolica  sede  usque 
ad  annum  1880  proscripti  suis  locis  re- 
censentur,  cum  appendice  usque  ad  men- 
sem martii  1887  inclusive.  Romae,  Ex 
typographia   polyglotta    1887   li,360p 

LC 

— Appendix  in  qua  recensentur  libri  pro- 
scripti a  die  10  julii  MDCCXCVII; 
usque  ad  diem  9  decembris  anni 
MDCCCVI.  Romae,  Apud  Lazarinnm! 
typographum  Reverendae  camerae  apos- 
tolica!   1807   8p 

LC  NY 

Indice  ultimo  de  los  libros  prohibidos  y 
mandados  expurgar:  para  todos  los  rey- 
nos  y  senoras  del  catolico  rey  de  las  Es- 
panas,  el  senor  Don  Carlos  IV;  contiene 
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en  los  edictos  posteriores,  asta  fin  di- 
ciembre  de  1789.  Madrid.  En  la  im- 
prenta  de  Don  Antonio  de  Sancha  1790 
xl,305p 

LC  Y 

Indices  librorum  prohibitorum  des   sech- 
zehnten    jahrhunderts    gesammelt    und 
hrsg.  von.  Fr.  Heinrich  Reusch  Tubin- 
gen,  Litterarischer  verein   1886  S98p 
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Mandamet  der  Keyserlijcker  Maiesteit, 
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1546  [New  York,  De  Vinne  press  1896] 
facsim.:[77]p 
LC  Y 

Ordenung  und  mandat  Keiser  Caroli  V, 
vernewert  in  april  anno  1550;  zu  aus- 
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.  .  .    [Brussel    1550]    [68]p 


Index  librorum  prohibitorum.  Index  ex- 
purgatorius 
Exact  reprint  of  the  Roman  Index  ex- 
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LCTS  Y 

Indicis  librorum  expurgandorum  in 
studiosorum  gratiam  confecti  ...  In 
quo  quinquaginta  auctorum;  libri  prae 
caesteris  desiderati  emendantur.  Romae, 
Ex  typographia  R.  cam.  apost.  1607  742p 

Y 

— Appendix  ad  Indecem  librorum  prohibito- 
rum a'  mense  aprilis  MDCCXIV;  usque 
ad  totum  mensem  junii  MDCCXLV. 
n.p.  1745?  573-5p 

Y 

— Appendix  ad  Indecem  librorum  prohibit- 
orum a'  mense  martii  MDCCXVI; 
usque  ad  totum  maii  MDCCXVIII. 
Romae,  Typis  Reverendae  camerae 
apostolicae   1718  463-75p 

Y 

— Appendix  novissima  ad  Indicem  librorum 
prohibitorum  ab  anno  MDCCIV  usque 
ad  totum  mensem  martij  MDCCXVI. 
Romae,  Typis  Reverendae  camerae 
apostolicae  1716  407-456p 

LC 

— Appendix  novissimae  appendici  ad  In- 
dicem librorum  prohibitorum  a  mense 
maii  MDCCXVIII;  usque  ad  totum 
mensem  julii  MDCCXXXIX  .  .  . 
Romae,  Typis  Hieronymi  lilainardi  1739 
479-5 16p 

Y 

— Appendix  ad  Indicem  librorum  prohibito- 
rum a  mense  junii  MDCCXLVI;  usque 
ad  totum  mensem  octobris  MDCC- 
XLVI.   n.p.    1746?   S77-9p 

Y 

— Same.  Romae,  Typis  Reu.  camerae  apos- 
tolicae  1704  ll,405p 

LC  Y 

— Appendix  ad  Indicem  librorum  prohibito- 
rum a  mense  junii  MDCCXLVI:  usque 
ad  totum  mensem  septembris  MDCCL. 
n.p.   1750?    [3]p 

Y 

— Raccolta  d'  alcune  particolarl  operette 
spirituali,  e  profane  prohibite  orazioni, 
e    divozioni   vane   .  .  .   n.p.    17-    517-68p 

Y 

— Appendix  novissimae  appendicis  ad  Indi- 
cem librorum  prohibitorum  a*  mense 
martii  MDCCXVI  usque  ad  totum  maii 
MDCCXVIII.  Romae.  Typis  Rever- 
endae camerae  apostolicae  1718  459-71p 

LC 

— Appendix  ad  Indicem  librorum  prohibito- 
rum a'  mense  feb.  MDCCXXXIX; 
usque  ad  totum  mensum  Jul.  MDCC- 
XLII.  n.p.  1742?  569-72p 

Y 


FREE  SPEECH 


235 


-Appendix  ad  Indicem  librorum  prohibito- 
rum  ab  anno  MDCCIV;  usque  ad  totum 
mensem  martii  MDCCXVI.  Romae, 
Typis  Reverendae  camerae  apostolicae 
1716  409-459p 


International  Magazine.  Jan,   1914 

Because  of  the  cover  illustration  this  maga- 
zine was  suppressed. 

Iowa  Medical  Journal.  (Des  Moines,  Iowa) 

March,   1897 
TS 

Jack,  George  N. 

Suggestions  adopted  by  the  Depew  board 
of  health  for  the  prevention  of  sick- 
ness, corruption,  or  crime,  and  as 
an  evolutionary  aid  to  humanity.  De- 
pew, N.Y.  1903 

Author,  a  doctor,  was  arrested  for  circulating 
"obscene"   literature. 

James,  I,  King  of  England,  1566-1625 
Book  of  sports.   1618 

Ordered  burnt  in  1644  and  all  existing  copies 
seized. 

John,    Henry 

(Publisher)   [Post  cards.]   St  Paul,  Minn. 
TS 

Excluded  from  mails  as  "obscene,"  Jan,  1910. 
This  catalogue  reproduced  in  minature  the  pic- 
ture cards  offered  for  sale.  The  offending  pic- 
tures were  mere  scenes  of  kissing  and  hugging. 

Jim  Jam  Jimior 

Jim  jam  jems.   Bismark,   S.    D.,    Clark   & 
Crockard   Nov,   1916  5-61p 
TS 

Joyce,  James 

Ulysses;   episode   XIII.   Little   Review  7: 
41-58 
TS 

For  this  story  the  publishers  of  the  Little  Re- 
view were  fined  on  the  charge  of  "obscenity." 

[Judah,  Samuel  Benjamin  Herbert]  d.  1799 
Gotham   and   the    Gothamites;    a   medley. 
New  York,  S.  King  1823  lvi,93p 
NY 

Suppressed  and  author  and  publisher  im- 
prisoned. 

Kerr,  R.  B. 

Up-to-date  fables.  New  York,  E.  C.  Walk- 
er 1905 

Key,  EUen 

War,  peace  and  the  future.  New  York  and 
London,  G.  P.  Putnam's  sons  1916  27lp 

Kidder,  M.  Grier 

"The  Virgin  Mary";  prefaced  by  Charles 
C.   Moore,   n.p.,  n.d.    [ll]p 
TS 

For  this  book,  Charles  C.  Moore  was  arrested 
on  allegation  of  its  "obscenity,"  Defendant  dis- 
charged. 

Knapp,  William  Ireland,   1835-1908 

Official  editions  and  reprints  of  the  Index 
librorum  prohibitorum  issued  in  the  six- 
teenth century.  New  York,  F.  Hart  & 
CO.  1880  8p 

Y 


Knowlton,  Charles 

Fruits  of  philosophy;  a  treatise  on  the 
population  question.  London,  J.  Wat- 
son  [about  1836] 

Suppressed  as  "obscene."  Republished  by 
Charles  Bradlaugh  as  challengre.  See  Bradlaugh 
edition.  Also:  Law  Reports,  Queen's  bench  dfe- 
vision   3:607. 

Knuttel,    WUlem   Pieter   ComeUs,    1854- 
Verboden    boeken    in    de    republiek    der 
Vereenigde  Nederlanden;  beredeneerde 
catalogus.     's-Gravenhage,     M.     NijhofT 
1914xii,140p 

LC 

Kropotkin,  P. 

Anarchist  morality.  London,  Freedom  of- 
fice 1909  36p 
TS 

Both  excluded  from  the  post  office  of  Hugo, 
Oklahoma  in    1910. 

Appeal     to     the     young.     London,     Wm. 
Reeves  n.d.  15p 
TS 

Leighton,  Alexander,  1568-1649 

Appeal  to  Parliament,  or  Sion's  plea 
against  prelacic.   1628 

Leighton  suffered  the  most  horrible  physical 
tortures   and  imprisonment. 

Leo  XIII,  Pope  (Giovaimi  Vincen^o  Raf- 
faelio  Luigi  Pecci)   1810-1903 
Constitutio  apostolica   de  prohibitione   et 
censura   librorum.   American    Ecclesias- 
tical  Review   16:404-17   1897 

PAR 

Lewis,  Denslow 

Gynecologic  consideration  of  the  sexual 
act. 

This  address  delivered  at  the  meeting  of  the 
American  Medical  Association  in  1899  was 
barred  from  publication  in  the  Journal  of  the 
American    Medical    Association. 

Liber,  B.  <, 

Dr   Liber  and  the  poet  office.    New    Re- 
public 20:61  Aug  13,  1919 
TS 

Tells  of  the  suppression  of  his  book  on  Sexual 
life,  on  the  pretense  of  its  "indecency"  with  the 
private  confession  that  it  was  because  too  radical 
in  giving  economic  explanation  of  disease  and 
prostitution. 

Library    censorship.    Truth    Seeker    46:149 
March  8,  1919 

Tells  of  exclusion  from  Dover  Public  Library 
of:  The  Christ;  The  Bible;  Six  historic  Amer- 
icans;  three   free   thought  books. 

Lilbum,  John 
Resurrection. 

A  man  was  once  fined  £10  for  merely  having 
a  copy   in  his  possession. 

Lion's  Paw,  a  Journal  of  the  Gods,  [maga- 
zine.]  Sept,  Oct,   1909 
TS 

Suppressed  because  it  advertised:  Schopen- 
hauer's Woman,  and  The  metaphysics  of  loTe; 
Fielding's  Tom  Jones;  Machiaevilli's  The  prince, 
and   Redbeard's  Might  is  right. 

Loti,   Pierre 

Spahi's  love  story;  tr.  from  the  French 
by  R.   B.   Douglas.   Paris   1907  342p 


236 


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Louys,  Pierre 
Aphrodite;   a   romance   of   Cleopatra   and 
ancient  Alexandria;  tr.  from  the  French. 
Paris   1906  428p 

Madeleine.  New  York,  Harper  &  brothers 
1919  328p 

Malchow,  C.  W. 
Sexual    life. 

Masoch,  Sacher 

Venus  in  furs;  a  romance  of  love  and  flag- 
ellation; tr.  into  English.  Paris  1902 
291p 

Matthews,    Brander    i.    e.    James    Brander, 

1852- 

Books   that  are   barred.    Munsey's   Maga- 
zine  50:493-7  Dec,   1913 
RG  '10-14 

Memorial  of  the  Church  of  England  humbly 
offered  to  consideration  of  all  true  lov- 
ers of  our  church  and  communion.  1705 

Mendham,  Joseph,   1769-1856 

Account  of  the  indexes,  both  prohibitory 
and  expurgatory,  of  the  Church  of 
Rome  .  .  .  London,  Hatchard  &  son 
1826  xii,187p 

Y 

Index  of  prohibited  books,  by  command  of 
the  present  pope,  Gregory  XVI  in  1835; 
being  the  latest  specimen  of  the  literary 
policy  of  the  Church  of  Rome.  London, 
Duncan  &  Malcolm  1840  xxxv,72,[38], 
73-130P 
LC  Y 

Metropolitan  Magazine.  Feb,   1914 
TS 

Meyer,  F.  Hermann 

Index  librorum  prohibitorum;  mit  beson- 
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(In:  Mittheilungen  der  deutschen  gesell- 
schaft  zur  erforschung  vaterlandischer 
sprache  und  alterthiimer  in  Leipzig. 
[138]-183p  Leipzig  1883-90) 
Y 

Montalembert,  [Charles  Forbes  Rene] 
comte  de,  1810-1870 

Montalembert  on  constitutional  liberty: 
a  picture  of  England,  painted  by  a 
Frenchman;  being  a  complete  transla- 
tion of  the  memorable  article  entitled 
"A  debate  on  India  in  the  English 
Parliament,"  which  has  subjected  the 
author  to  the  now  pending  state  pros- 
ecution. 3d  ed  London,  E.  Wilson  1858 
76p 

More  condemned  books.  Literary  Digest  59: 
27  Oct  12.  1918 

Gives  a  list  of  books  debarred  from  army 
camps. 

Morrow,  Prince  A. 

Social  diseases  and  marriage;  social 
prophylaxis.  New  York  and  Philadel- 
phia,   Lea   brothers    &   co.    1904 

Sylvanus  Stall  quoted  much  from  this  in  a 
popular  book  entitled  Social  peril,  which  was  sup- 
pressed as   "obscene." 


Mother    Earth    [magazine.]    vol.    12    June, 
1917 

Suppressed  by  the  post  office  department  for 
articles  tending  to  discourage  enlistment  and  con- 
scription. 

Muggleton,  Lodowick,  and  Reeve,  William 

Transcendant  spiritual  treatise.   1652 

Authors  imprisoned  for  six  months  on  charge 
of  blasphemy. 

Neck  of  the  Quakers  broken. 

Muggleton  amerced  £500,  condemned  to  the 
pillory    and    his    books    ordered    burnt. 

Nani,    Giovanni    Battista    Felice    Gasparo. 

1616-1678 
Historia  della  republica  Veneta.  Venczia, 
Appresso  il  Lovisa  1718-22 

Noyes,  John  Humphrey 

Male  continence.  Oneida,  The  Oneida 
community    1872   24p 

For  this  Noyes  was  prosecuted  and  convicted. 
This  report  to  me  has  been  later  questioned. 

Ottino,  Giuseppe,  1841-1898,  and  Fumagalli, 
G. 

Bibliotheca   bibliographica   italica  .  .  .   4v 
Rome,    L.    Pasqualucci    1889;    2v    in    1, 
Turin,    C.    Claussen    1895 
NY 

Pages  190-200  contain  a  bibliography  of  bibli- 
ographies of  condemned  books. 

Palmer,  Elihu,   1763-1806 

Principles   of  nature;   or,  A   development 
of  moral  causes  of  happiness  and  misery 
among  the  human  species.  London  1802 
NY 

Reprinted  in  1819  by  Richard  Carlile. 

Parisienne;    [magazine].    1:4   October,    1915 
Suppressed  for  Look  into  your  closet,  a  story 
of  overwhelming  love,  by  Howard  P.   Rockey. 

Parke,  J,  Richardson 

Human  sexuality— a  medico-literary  treat- 
ise. 

Author    arrested    but    not    convicted. 

Peignot,  Gabriel  i.  e.  fitienne  Gabriel,  1767- 
1849 

Dictionnaire  critique,  litteraire,  et  bib- 
liographique  des  principaux  livres  con- 
damnes  au  feu,  suprimes  ou  censures: 
precede  d'un  discours  sur  ces  sortes 
d'ouvrages.  Paris,  A.  A.  Renouard  1806 
2v 
LC  XY  Y 

Petzholdt,  Julius 

Catalogus  '"Indicis  librorum  prohibitorum 
et  expurgandorum.''  Speciman  quod 
maxime  viris  praenobilissimis  et  peril- 
lustribus  praefectis  bibliothecarum  Be- 
rolinensis,  Bruxellensis,  Drcsdensis, 
Florentinae,  Gottingensis,  Lipsiensis, 
Londinensis,  Lovaniensis,  Madritcnsis, 
Mediolanensis.  Monacensis,  Norimberg- 
ensis,  Oxoniensis,  Parisinae,  Petropol- 
itanae,  Pragonsis,  Vaticano-Romanae, 
Venetianae  ct  Vindobonensis,  eo  con- 
silio,  ut  catalogum  ex  opidus  suis  cor- 
rigant,  suppleant  atque  angeant,  rite  pie 
offert  auctor  J.  Petzholdt.  Dresdae, 
Blochmann  &  fil.  1859  34p 


FREE  SPEECH 


237 


Pocklington,  John,  d.  1642 

Altare    christianum;    or    the    dead    vicar's 

plea.  London   1637 
Sunday  no  sabbath.  London  1636 
Burnt    by   the    common   hangman. 

Retana  y  Gamboa,  Wenceslao  Emilio,  1S62- 
La     ccnsura     de     imprenta     en     Filipinas. 
Madrid,  V.  Suirez  1908  40p 
LC 

Reprinted  from  Nucstro  Tiempo,  Madrid,  No- 
vember,  1907. 

Reusch,  Franz  Heinrich,  1825-1900 

Index  der  verbotcnen  biicher;  ein  beitrag 
zur  kirchen-und   literaturgeschichte.   2v 
Bonn,  M.  Cohen  &  sohn  1883-85 
LC  Y 

Die  Indices  librorum  prohibitorum  et  cx- 
purgandorum  des  16.  jahrhunderts.  (In: 
Neuer  Anzeiger  fiir  bibliographie  und 
bibliothekwissenschaft.    1880   p257-264) 

Robinson,   William  Josephus 

American  Journal  of  Urology  and  Sexol- 
ogy. October,   1918 

This  number  suppressed  by  post  office  for  re- 
production of  male  nudes. 

Formula  for  prevention  of  conception. 
Critic   and   Guide   Nov,   1907  pl57 

For  this  Dr  Robinson  was  threatened  with 
prosecution,  though  he  offered  formula  only  to 
physicians. 

Rogeard,  Auguste  i.  e.  Louis  Auguste,  1820- 

1896 
.  .  .  Lcs  propos  de   Labienus;  la  critique 

historique  sous  Auguste.  New  York,  il. 

de  Mareil  1865  16p 
LC  NY 

— Same,  lie  ed  beige  Bruxelles  1866  79p 
Y 

—Same.  22e  ed  Bruxelles   1870  52p 
Y 

Rosenbaum,  Julius 

Plague  of  lust  in  classical  antiquity.  Paris 
1901  672p  2v 

Sanger,  Margaret 

Woman  rebel.   New  York 

Afacrazine,  suppressed  because  of  birth  control 
information. 

Sanger,  William   W. 

History      of     prostitution.      New      York, 
Harper  &  brothers  1876  68Sp 
TS 

"From  its  very  name,  is  clearly  indecent  and 
unfit  to  circulate  through  the  mail."  Post  office  de- 
departmcnt  suppressing  American  Journal  of 
Eugenics    for    Nov.    1907. 

Saunders,  W.  O. 

Blease   ought   to   be    shot.    Down 
6:1-3  Feb.   1912 


Homer 


On    account   of   this   article    Saunders    was 
dieted. 


Scot 


(or    Scott) 

3.VS-I5QO 


Scot's 
1654 


Reginald    (or    Reynold) 
discovery    of    witchcraft.    London 


This    book 
death. 


irdered    burnt,    after    author's 


Sepp,    Christiaan,    1820-1890 

Verboden  lectuur;  een  drietal  Indices  lib- 
rorum prohibitorum  toegelicht  door 
Christiaan  Sepp  .  .  .  Leiden,  L.  J.  Brill 
1889   286p 

LC 

Serrano  y  Sanz,  Manual 

El  Conscjo  de  Castilla  y  la  ccnsura  de 
libros  en  el  siglo  XVIII.  Revista  de 
archivo  biblioteca  15:28-46;  243-59;  387- 
402;    16:108-16;    206-18    1906-7 

Y 

Sexual  hygiene;  compiled  from  books, 
articles  and  documents,  many  not  here- 
tofore published;  by  the  editorial  staff 
of  the  alkaloidal  clinic.  Chicago,  Clinic 
publishing  co.    1901  296p 

TS 

Suppressed  by  post  office  department. 

Shaw,  George  Bernard 

Mrs  Warren's  profession;  an  unpleasant 
play.    New    York,    Brentano's    1913    84p 

Sleumer,   Albert,   1876- 

Index  ronianus;  verzeichnis  samtlicher  auf 
dem  rcimischen  index  stehenden  deut- 
schen  biicher,  desgleichen  aller  fremd- 
sprachlichen  biicher  seit  dem  jahre  1870; 
auf  grund  der  neuestcn  vatikanischen 
ausgabe  .  .  .  Osnabriick,  G.  Pillmeycr 
1906  76p 

LC 

Index  romanus;  verzeichnis  samtlicher  auf 
dem  romischen  index  stehenden  deut- 
schen  biicher,  desgleichen  aller  wich- 
tigen  fremdsprachlichen  biicher  seit  dem 
jahre  1750;  zusammengestellt  auf  grund 
der  neuestcn  vatikanischen  ausgabe;  mit 
kirchlicher  genehmigung.  Osnabriick, 
G.    Pillmeyer    (J.    fonscher)    1911    141p 

LC 

Snappy  Stories  [magazine]  for  March,  1916. 
was  destroyed  bj'  New  York  Society 
for  suppression  of  vice 

Spencer,   Henry   Percival,   1883- 

Rape  of  Hallowe'en.  Boston.  R.  G.  Bad- 
ger 1911   107p 

LC  TS 

Suppressed  in  New  York  and  Boston.  On 
page  64  is  suggestion  of  priest  being  father  of  a 
child.      This    was    held    "obscene." 

Sperry,  Lyman  Beecher 

Husband  and  wife.  New  York,  Revell  co. 
1900 

Argument  in  favor  of  birth  control,  pi39-55- 
The  early  editions  gave  prohibited  information. 
This  part  of  the  book  was  voluntarily  suppresed 
by    the    publisher. 

Stall,  Sylvanus 

Not  a  toothache  or  a  bad  cold  in  the 
head.  Philadelphia,  Vir  pub  co.  1905 
27p 

Suppressed  by  threat  of  prosecution  from  An- 
thony Comstock. 

Social  peril;  facts  for  the  consideration 
of  the  men  who  say  of  a  certain  disease 
that  they  "would  as  soon  have  it  as  a 
toothache  or  a  bad  cold  in  the  head." 
Phihidelphia.    [etc.]    Vir   publishing   co. 

TS 


238 


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LC  Y 

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FREE  SPEECH  239 

X                          Jacobus  and  customs  of  semi-civilized  peoples. 

*'*'.*■"***"*          ,           t-   1                .   ^       {  Paris  1898  909p  2v 

Basis  of  passional  psychology;  a  study  of  ^ola.  fimUe  fiduard  Charles  Antoine,  1840- 

the  physical   and  mental   laws  of  love.  ,'gQ2 

Paris    1901    640p   2v  t.                a             t        n    ioqq 

T^  ,       ,           £    1.      •   xu              r-      .u  J  accuse.  Aurore  Jan.  13,  1898 

Ethnology  of  the  sixth  sense  [i.e.  the  sex-  Convicted   of   libeling   the    military   authorities 

ualj:     its     abuses,     perversions,     tollies,  anj   sentence    was   passed  upon   him   imposing   a 

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Untrodden  fields  of  anthropology;  being  Novels.  1888 

observations   on    the    esoteric   manners  (Finis) 


i! 


INDEX 


Abbot,  F.  E.,  144 
Abbott,  L.,  71.  MS 
Abbott,  L.  D.,  92,  iSS 
Abbott,  L.  F.,  171 
Abrams,  J.,  9-.  98,  224 
Academic  freedom,  112- 
Ackerly,  W.  W.,  71,  178 
Acton,   J.    E.    E.,    51 
Adair,  J.,  37 
Adams,  A.  N.,   138 
Adams,  E.  F.,  71 
Adams,  E.  L.,   1 18 
Adams,  J.  C,  126 
Adams,  J.  Q.,  71 
Addams,  J.,   209 
Addison,   A..   83 
Adler,    F.,    107 
Agoult,  C.   C,   58 
Agricola,    pseud.,    83 
Ahrens,  T.,   148 
Aiken,  J.   F..   71 
Aiken,  S.  C,  71,  169 
Aikman,  J.,    136 
Albert,  A.  H.,  68 
Alden,   R.   M.,  209 
Aldis,  II.  G..  71 
Aldred,  G.  A.,  93,  153,  171 
Alexander,   C.   B.,   71 
Alexander,  H.  B.,  71 
Alcxanderson,  N.,  69 
Alger,  F.,   ijo 
Alien    and    Sedition    laws, 

83- 
Allard,  P..  58 
AUbutt,    H.    A.,    189,    203, 

227 
Allen,  Z.,   160 
Allestree,   R.,   6 
Allier,  R.,   143 
Allin,  C.   D.,   209 
Allin,  T.,   132 
Allison,  V.  K..  189 
Almon,   J.,    30,    32,    41 
Almy,  F.,  107 
Alt,    H.,    169 
Alvimar,  O.,  58 
American      association      of 
university  professors,  112 
American     railway    literary 
union,  103 

American      secular      union 
and  free  thought  federa- 
tion,   16: 
'Ames,   J.,    28 

Ames,   S.,    126 

Anarchists,   92- 

Ancillon,  J.   P.   F.,   64 

Anderson,  F.  M.,  84 

Anderson,  G.,  26 

Anderson,  M.,  71 

Anderton,   W.,   2t 

Andreas,  V.,  2 

Andrews,  \V.,  51 

Andrews,  W.  E.,  153 

Andringa  de  Kempenair,  R. 
L.,   68 

Angell,  N.,  pseud.,  209 

Annett,  P.,   134 

Anstey,  F.,  209,  227 

Anvcrs,  C.,  25 

Appleton.  H.,   71 

Araujo,  O.,  58 

Arber,  E.,  51 

Archbishop's   committee    on 
church  and  state,   161 

Archer,  W.,  71,  169 

Arnall.  W..  26 

Arnauld,  A.,  22 

Arndt,  A.,  142 

Arroyo   y   Herrera.   C,    49 

Arvidsson,   A.   I.,   70 

Asgill,  J.,    18,  21,    153,  227 


Ashley,  J.,  189 
Askowith,  D.,   150 
Aspland,  L.  M.,  118,  153 
Aspland,   R.,    153 
Atherley-Jones,   L.   A.,   2:0 
Atherly,  J.   J.,   210 
Atkinson,  W.,  7>.  87,  116 
Atterbury,   F.,   19,   24 
Aucrbach,  J.  S.,   178 
Axon,   W.   E.  A.,   51 
Backus,  I.,  32,  34,   36,    16: 
Bacon.,  5 
Bacon,  C,   193 
Bacon,   F.,    171 
Bagehot,  W.,  140 
Baginski,  M.,   104,    178 
Bagshaw,  E.,  9 
Bailey,  W.   S.,    104 
Baker,    R.,    10 
Bakker,  A.?,    16 
Balderston,  J.  L.,  193 
Baldwin,  W.  J.,  134 
Ball,  J.,  118 
Ball,   W.  v.,    118 
Ballein,  J.  H.,  169 
Balliet,  T.  M.,   112 
Bamberger,   M.    L.,    14s 
Bamford,   S.,  51 
Bancroft,  A..   161 
Band  well,   B.   K.,  210 
Banks,  W..  210 
Bannister,  S.,  51 
Bannon,  F.,  152,  161 
Baraly.,  47 
Barbauld,  A.  L.,  41 
P.arbeyac.,    20 
Barbier,  G.,  58 
Barnard,  T.,  46 
Baron,   R.,  ed.,  28 
Barry,    R.,    210 
Barry,    W.    F..    178 
Bartholomew,  J.,  118 
Bartholomew,   R.   O.,  205 
Barthou,   L.,    112 
Barwick,  G.  F.,  71 
Bascom,  J.,   1 14 
Basire,  I.,  9 
Bassett,  E.   P.,   139 
Basfide,   C.,    146 
Bastwick,  J.,  3,  4 
Bates,   C.   A.,   87 
Bates,   H.   M.,   210 
Baudin,  P.  C.   L.,  41.  49 
Baudouin,  A.,  137,  171 
Bauer,  A.,  58 
Bauer,  B.,  64 
Baumeister,  H.,  64 
Bautain,  L.   E.  M.,   161 
Bax,   E.  B.,   114,   119 
Baxter,  R.,   13,  14,  15,  138, 

227 
Bayle,   P.,    20.    26,    193 
Bayley,    H.,    51 
Bayley,   Sir  J.,    153 
Bayly.   T..    7 
Bazille.    C,    and    Constant, 

C,  58 
Bcalc,  W.,  3 
Bealey,  J.,  41 
Bcall.  E.  C,  Z27 
Beard,  C.  A..  72,  112 
Beardsley,  S.,   1 16 
Bcaufoy,   H..   38 
Beaumarchais,  P.  A.,  35 
Beaussire,    E.,    58 
Beck,   C,    iSq 
Beck,  J.  B.,   126 
Beck,  J.  M..  87 
Bedborough,    G.,    198,    203 

206 
Bedford,  A.,   19,   23 
Bcecher,  E.,   105 


Beechcr,  H.  VV.,  136 

Behaghel.    A.    A.,   58 

Beilby,    S.,    41 

Belangcr,   A.,    58 

Belin,  J.  P.,  227 

Bell,    B.    1..    166 

Bell,    R.    H.,    107 

Bell,    W.    S.,    178 

Bellamy,  T.,   10 

Bclloc,  H.,  210 

Belloc,  M..  S2 

Bellows,  H.  W.,  166,  20s 

Belmont,   A.,   126 

Bemis,    E.   W.,  87 

Bender,    H.,    142 

Bennett,    A.,    210 

Bennett,    D.    M.,    140,    178, 

193,   198,  207 
Bennett,    E.    N.,    210 
Bennett,  J.  G.,  207 
Benson,   A.   L.,   72 
Bentham,  J.,  52,    114 
Benzelstierna,    G.,    70 
Berchois,   H.,    147 
Berenger,  R. 
Berg,  J.  F.,  138 
Berg,   L.,    186 
Berkman,    A.,    88,    93,    95. 

22s 
Berliner,  A.,    142,  227 
Berrier,    L.,    203,    228 
Berrington,  J.,   38,   39 
Besant,  A.,  228 
Besse,  J.,  28 
Best,  P.,  228 
Best,  T.,    169 
Bethlcem,  L.,   193 
Betten,   F.   S.,   228 
Bettman,   A.,    171 
Betz,    I.    H.,    84 
Beuf,  J.,  58 
Bevan,  J.  O.,  147 
Beverlandus,  H.,   13,  228 
Beze,   T.,    i 
Biacchi,  A.,  1 19 
Biddle,  J.,  8,  45,  228 
Bidoire,    P.,    58 
Bignel,   M.    A.,    171 
Bikle,    H.   W.,    171 
BillaudVarenne,  J.   N.,  40 
Billault,    A.   A.   M.,    58 
Billing,  E.,   10 
Bilton,   H.,   23 

Binnev,   B.,  35 

Birch,   U.,    132 

Bishop,    A.,    161 

Bishop,   G.,   9,    19 

Biston,   P.,   59 

Blace,  J.   de,   144 

Black,  H.  72,  205 

Black.  H.  C..  119 

Blackburnc,  F.,  133 

Blacker,  M.  J.,   139 

Blackwood,  W.,    129 

Blacow,   R.,   28 

Blades.   W.,   52 

Blair,  R.,   13 

Blake.   M..   147 

Blanchard,   W..   37 

Blasphemy,  153- 

Blood,  J.  H..   186 

Blount,  C,    13.    16,  228 

Blount,  J.    H.,    119 

Bliimml,  E.  K.,  193 

Bodel  Nijenhuis,  J.  T.,  68 

Bogart,    G.    H.,    203 

Boissy,  C.  D.,   36 

Boland,   H.,   72 

Bold,    S..    14 

Bolde,   S.   See  Bold.   S. 

Bollan,  W.,  3»,  32 

Belles,  J.,   28,  29 


Bolles,  J.  R.,   145 
Bolshevists,    98- 
Bonald,  L.  G.  A.,  59 
Bonche-Ledercq,  G.,  147 
Bonet-Maury,   A.  G.   C.   A. 

145,    1.46 
Bonnassies,  J.,   59 
Bonner,    H.    B.,    153,    161, 

166,    189,   2:0 
Bonney,  C.  C.,  72 
Borah,    W.     E.,     107,     171, 

210,  225 
Born.   E.,  iig 
Borthwick,  J.,   52 
Boston,    C.   A.,    116 
Bostwick,  A.  L.,  205 
Boudinhon.,  143,  228 
Bourbon,    A.,    10 
Bourdeille,   P.  de,  228 
Bourgeois,  E.,  59 
Bourne,  G.,  1 16 
Bourne,   R.   S.,    112 
Boutroux,    E.    E.    M.,    147. 

151 
Bowdler,  T.,   i6t 
Bower,  A.,  29 
Bowles,   J.,    46 
Boyd,  E.,   193 
Boyd,   F.   S.,    104 
Boyle,  H.,   153 
Boyle,  P.,  129 
Bracht,   T.   J.   von,    136 
Brackenridge,  H.  H.,  72 
Bradbury,   T.,   39 
Bradford.  A.  B.,  228 
Bradford.  W.,  16 
Bradlaugh,  C.,  228 
Braght.   T.,   28 
Brainerd,  T.,  169 
Brandenburg,  E.,  64 
Bray,    T.,   21 
Brayer,   F.,  comp.,  59 
Breckinridge,  H.,  189 
Breckinridge,   J.,    163 
Breckinridge.    R.   J.,    126 
Breever,   D.   J..    119 
Bretschneider,    K.   G.,    161 
Brewer,  D.  C,  210 
Brewerton,  W.  W.,   119 

Bridge,   \V.,  4 

Bricllat.    T..    47 
Brinsmade.  P.  A.,   126 

Bristow.  W.,  41 
Britannicus,   pseud.,   34 

Brodhead.  J.  M.  N..    161 

Brodrick,  G.  C.,  138 

Bromberg,  F.  G.,  210 

Brook,  B..   133,  134,   J36 

Brooke,  W.  G.,   i66 

Brooks,  J.  G.,  87 

Brooks,    P.,    141 

Brooks.   S.,  211 

Brougham  and  Vaux,  H.  P. 
B.,  52.   126.  161 

Broun.  H..   178.   194 

Brown,  B.  F.,  i6i 

Brown,  C.  T.,   194 

Brown.  E.  E.,  112 

Brown,  E.  W.,  140 

Brown,  H.   B.,   72 

Brown,    H.    F.,    142 

Brown,   H.    H.,    154 

Brown,  J.,   19 

Brown,  J.,  29 

Brown,  J.,  30 

Brown.  J.,    126 

Brown,   J.,    133 

Brown.   J.    B..    162 

Browne,  E.   E.,  72 

Browne.  R.,  1 

Brownson,  R.  R.,  9.I 

Bruce,  A.,  47 


242 


INDEX 


Brunei.   G.,  228 
BrunttiSre,    F.,    59 
Brunner,  J.   C,    178 
Bruno,   G.,    102,  228 
Bryant,    L.,    J89 
Brydall,  J.,   13 
Buchanan,  R.,   194 
Buchanan,  R.  W.,  178 
Buchanan,  W.,  52 
Biicher,  K.,  64,  211 
Buchholtz,   A.,  64 
Buckingham,  J.  T.,   127 
Buckle,   H.  T.,  139 
Buckley,    E.   J.,    104 
Buckley,    G.,    127 
Buckley,  J.    M.,    169 
Bugg,    F.,    14 
Buhler,   M.,   70 
Buisson,  F.,  59 
Buniva,  G.,  67 
Bunsen,  C.  K.  J.,  138 
Bunyan,  J.,  30 
Burgman,  C.  F.,  88,  146 
Burgner,    H.   H.,    186 
Burke,    E.,    72,    127,    139 
Burlamaqui,  J.  J.,   162 
Burn,   J.    S.,    139 
Burnaby,    A.,    41 
Burnet,  G.,  15,  50 
Burnett,  T.,  22 
Burnichon,  J.,  T44 
Burrage,   C.,    148 
Burroughs,  J.,   4 
Burrows,   E.  D.,   194 
Burton,  H.,   3,  4,  228 
Burton,    T.,     134 
Bury,   J.    B.,    149 
Busher,    L.,    2 
Buss,  B.  C.  E.,   178 
Butler,    B.   F.,    127 
Butler,   r.,   162 
Butler,  G.  F.,  229 
Butler,   N.   C..   72 
Butler,    N.    M.,    72 
Butte,    G.    C.    F.,    72 

Cabanes,   229 

Caine,  H.,  229 

Calamy,  E.,  23,  35,  36 

Calderwood,  D.,  2 

Caldwell,   H.   C.,   116 

Caldwell,  J.   B..  203 

Calhoun,  A.  W.,   107 

Calmet,    A.,    59 

Calvert,    B.,  93 

Camm,    D.    B..     162 

Cammerhoff,  F.,   114 

Campbell,  A.,  211 

Campbell,  T.,   154 

Campion,    W.,     154 

Candor,  pseud.,  30 

Canfield,   L.  H.,  149 

Canneti,   C,   67 

Canning,  A.   S.   G.,    140 

Capen,   S.   P.,   72 

Carey,    M.,    134.    135 

Carlile,  J.?,    154 

Carlile,  M.,   154 

Carlile.   R.,    154,    162 

Care,   M.,   58 

Carr,  F.,  119 

Carr,  H.,  14 

Carr,  Sir  J.,  127 

Carr,    W.    P.,    329 

Carroll.  T.  F.,  84 

Cartault,  A.,  59 

Cartwright,  J.,  52 

Carus,  P.,  171 

Gary,  W.  J.,  211 

Cass,  L.,  162 

Cass.    S.    B.,    211 

Castro   V   Rossi,  A.   de,    137 

Gate,    C.    M.,    229 

Catlow.,    40 

Cattell,   J.,    72 

Cavazzoni  Pederzini,  F.,  67 

Caverno,  C,    194 

Cellior,    E.,    13 

Cenni,   E.,   67 

Censor   Peregrinus,   pseud., 

211 
Chadwick,  J.  W.,  162 


Chafce,   7...  jr.,    72, 


93. 


Chamberlain,     E.    W.,     178, 

198 
Chamberlain,  J.  D.,  72,   149 
Chamberlin,    J.    F.,    127 
Chancellor,  W.  E.,  72 
Chandhuri,   J.,    171 
Chandler,    P.    W.,    171 
Chandler,   S.,    133 
Chandra,   R.,    211 
Channing,  W.  E.,  166 
Chanter,   J.    F.,    147 
Chantome,  P.,  162 
Chapin,    R.,    100 
Chapman,  A.  B.  W.,  72 
Charpentier,  A.,   171 
Charrier,  P.,  119 
Charters,    Z.    S.,    107 
Chassan,   J.    P.,    59 
Chassin,  C.   L.,   59,    162 
Chassarnan,  J.,   3 
Chateaubriand,    F.    A.     R., 
^  52,    59    ^ 
Chauncy,  C,  27 
Cheetham,  J.,    127 
Cheever,  G.   B.,   127 
Chenier,    M-J.,    59 
Ch(Erot,  H.,  59,  166 
Chervin,    H.    T.,    189 
Chester,   S.  B.,   119 
Chevaillier,   A.    A.,    72 
Cheyney,    E.    P.,    72 
Chidley,    W.    J.,    198,    203, 

Chnd,   D.   L.,    127 
Child.    R.   W.,    119 
Chillingworth,  W.,   15 
Chotteau,  L.,  59 
Christie,   J.    R.,    119 
Christophilus,    pseud.,     154, 

171 
Church  and  state,  160- 
Cian,  v.,  141 
Claflin,   T.   C,    186 
Claghorne,    K.    H.,    171 
Clarendon.    E.,    12 
Claretie,  J..   59 
Qark,   H.   W.,    148 
Clark,   S.  H.,   198 
Clark.     VV.     L.,     149,     166, 

198,    229 
Clarke,   R.  H.,    140 
Clarke,    S.,    comp.,    9 
Clarke.   S..   8 
Clarkson,  L..   5,   229 
Clasen,   D..  8 
Claxton.    L.    See    Clarkson, 

L. 
Cleary,    W.,    194 
Clempby.,    68 
Clendon,  J.,   229 
Cleveland,  A.,  119 
Cleyre,  V.  de,  93 
Clifford,  J.  R.,    198 
Cline,    F.,    119 
Coan,  T.  M.,  ed.,  72 
Cobb,   F.  I.,  98,   172 
Cobb,   S.    H.,   14s 
Cobbett,    W.,    49,    52,     127, 

172 
Cobbin,   I..    133 
Cockburn,  H.   T.  C,   172 
Cocks,    O.   G.,   205 
Coffin,  C.   C,   132 
Cohen,    C,    107,    152,    154, 

Cole'.' J.  W.,   169 
Colebrook,   Sir  G.,  45 
Coleman,    B.    S.,    loo 
Coleman,    E.,    12 
Coleman,    L.,    142 
Coleman,  W.   H.,   150 
Coleridge,     Sir    J.     D.    C, 

127,    154 
Coleridge,  S.  T.,  52,  136 
Coles,  J..    135 
Collet.    C.   D.,   52 
Collier,  J.,    17,    18,    179 
Collier.  N.  C.   116 
CoUigan,    J.    H.,    150 
Collins,    A.,    22,    25,    26,    27 
Combe,  G.,  229 


Committee  of  inquiry  on 
conditions  at  the  Univer- 
sity of   Utah,    112 

Communists,  98- 

Comstock,  A.,  72,  179,  186, 
207 

Conder,    E.    R.,    162 

Condon,   P.,    146 

Congdon,   C.   T.,   211 

Congreve,   VV.,    132 

Connolly,   C.    P.,    116 

Consentius,  E.,  64 

Constant,   C.,   59 

Constant.  F.,    155 

Constant  de  Rebecque,  H. 
B.,  59,  172 

Contempt   of   court,    116- 

Conti.  A.,  64 

Conway,  M.  D.,  72,  155, 
179,   180 

Cook.  C.   v.,  93 

Cook,    Sir    E.   T.,    212 

Cook,    G.    C,    73 

Cooley,    T.    M.,    139 

Coomer,  H.,   107,   194 

Cooper,  H.,  117 

Cooper,  J.  F..   127 

Cooper,    T.,    84 

Coote,  W.   A.,  207 

Cope,   E.,  jr.,    107 

Copeland,  M.  A.,  212 

Corbin,   J.,    150,    179 

Corwin,    E.    S.,    212 

Coryell,    J.    R.,    187,    205 

Cosin,    J.,    27 

Cosin.   R.,  2 

Cotarelo  y  Mori,  E.,  169 

Cotton,   J.,   4,   6,  8 

Cottu,  C,  59.   172 

Coudert.   F.    R.,    141 

Cougnard.  J.   L.  S.,   162 

Coulon,   H.,   59 

Coulson,   H.  J.  W.,   155 

Courtenay.,    41 

Courtney,  J.  C,   119 

Cowie,   B.    M.,    162 

Craddock,    1.    C,    229 

Craies,   W.   F.,   205 

Crandall,   R.,    105,    172 

Crane,  A.,  229 

Crane,  F.,  205 

Crane,  J.   M.,    199 

Crawford,    M.    S.,    179 

Creel.   G.,  212 

Creighton,   J.    E.,    73 

Creighton,   M.,    143 

Crell.  J.,  3.    IS 

Cremieux,  A.,   172 

Crevel,  A.,   60 

Crivellari,    G.,    67 

Crockard,  C.   H.,    198 

Croft.  G.,  41 

Crook,  J.,  9 

Crookor,  J.    H.,    163 

Cros,  G.,  60 

Crosby,  E.,  88 

Crosby,    E.    H.,   93 

Cross,   A.   L..    162 

Cross,    H.    L.,    119 

Cross,    M..    ed.,    73 

Croswell.    H..    127 

Crottet.   E.,  68 

Crowell,  W.   B..    119 

Crutchfield.  J.   F.,   73 

Cucheval-Clarigny,  M.,  60 

Cuenoud.  J.,   194 

Cunningham,  F.,  jr.,  93 

Curran,  J.    P.,   73 

Gushing,    M.   H.,    179 

Cusseres,    B.    de,    194 

Czygan,   P.,    172 

D.,  B.,   212 

Dacosta,  J.,   172 

Dale,  A.,  205 

Daly,  J.  B.,   141,   172 

Danks,  W.,   147 

Dareste.  P.,  60 

Daru.    P.    A.    N.    B.,    60 

Daubeny,  C,  135 

Daudville.    C,   60 

D'Aurevilly.   J.    B.,    229 

D'Auvcrgne,  E.  B.,   179 


Davenport,  J.,  93 
Davidson,  T.,  155 
Davis,    E.    G.,    117 
Davis,  G.  L.  L.,  162 
Davis,    R.    H.,   212 
Davis,   W.   F.,    166 
Dawbarn,  C,  52,  212 
Dawes,  M.,  37 
Dawson,    B.,    32 
Dawson,  F.  W.,  127 
Dawson,    G.,    207 
Dawson,   O.,    187,    199,  207 
Day,    T.,    38 
Dealey,  J.   Q.,    146 
Debs,   E.  v.,  88,    108 
De    Coetlogen.,    41 
Defoe,  D.,   19,  21,  22,   162, 

229 
De  Ponblanque,  E.  B.,  73 
Delaunay,  J.,  40 
De    Laune,   T.,    21,    155 
Dell.   F.,   98,    100,  205 
Delprat,    E.,   60 
Democritus,      pseud.,      179, 

199 
Dcnison,  S.,  2 
Denman,  J.,    169 
Dennis,  J.,   17,  25 
Dennis,  J.,   18 
Denson,   J.    S.,    199 
Dent,  T.,  212 
Depew,   C.   M.,   73 
De    Silver,    A.,    73 
Desjardins,  A.,  60 
Despois,  E.,  60 
Desprez  de  Boissy,  C,  36 
Deutsch,   Mrs  E.  Z.,   189 
Devine,  E.  T.,  73 
Dewey,  B.,   162 
Dewey,  J.,   73,   1:2,  212 
Dewey,   S.,   212 
Dicey,   A.    V.,    73 
Dickinson,   T.   H.,   73,  205 
Diels,   H.,  64 
Digby,    G.,    3 
Diggs,  D.,  5 
Dijk,  J.,  38 
Dillard,  J.   H..   73,   105 
Dilthey,  W.,   142 
Dimnet,  E.,  205 
Disney,  J.,  20,  25,  41 
D'Israeli,    I.,    52 
Ditchfield,  P.  H.,  143 
D'Joinville,    L.  A.,    189 
Doane,  G.  W.,   166 
Dodd,  \V.  E..  113 
Dodge,  H.  G.,  212 
Doine,  J.   B.,    136 
Dolan,    J.    G.,    143 
DoIIinger,    J.    I.    von,    142, 

143 
Dolsen,  J.    H.,    in 
Donatelli,    G.,     136 
Donisthorpe,   \V.,   52 
Dorrance,  J.,  127 
Doty.    E.,    179 
Douglas,   R.   B..   229 
Douniol.    C..    17s 
Dourdenevski.  V.,  60 
Dow.    L.,    128 
Drake,  J..  17 
Draper,   J.   \V.,   73,    143 
Dreiser,  T.,   155,    179,   194 
Dreyfus,  R.,  60 
Drujon,    F..    230 
Drummond.,    41 
Dubois,   A.,    60 
Dubois,    F.,   93 
Dubois,  L.,  60 
Duboy,    H.,    60 
Dubroca,  J.  C,  60 
Dubrowitz,    H.,    73 
Duchaine.  G.,  51 
Duckett.    Sir  G.,   50 
Duckett.   Sir  G.   F.,    140 
Duckworth,   L.,   52 
Ducos.    L.    F.,    13s 
Duffield.  G.  H.,  73 
Duguit,  L..  73 
Duncan.    J..    38 
Duniway.   C.   A.,   73 
Dunlap,   A.,    155 
Duplat.  G.,  60 


INDEX 


243 


Dupont-White,  C.  B..  60 
Duro,    C.    F.,    230 
Dury,  J.,  2,  9 
Dusberrie,    W.,    230 
Dussant,    E.,    i37 
Dwight,  T.,   169 
Dyer,   C.    M.,    114 
Dyer,  C,  49 
Eastman.   M.,   88 
Eastman.   N.   L.  A..    128 
Eaton.   C,    162 
Eaton.    D.    1..    4'.    46,    47, 

155,    230 
Eaton.  David,   I33 
Eaton.  S..  7^     „„ 
Eaton.  \V.  D.,  88.  213 
Eaton,   W.   P.,  213 
Ebel,  H..  64       ^ 
Ebner.  A.,  64,  65 
Edgerton,   A..  73,    -'3 
Edwards,  G.,  93 
Edwards,  P.  L.,  74 
Edwards,   T.,   4,   6 
Egger.   A-.   70 
Ehrcntrcich.    H.,   OS 
Ekholm.   A.   C.    150 
Eldon.  J.    S.,   128 
Eliot,   C.   W.,   74 
Eliot,  F.  P.,  45 
Eliot.  J..  84 
Eliot.   S..    137  „ 
Elliot.  J.  B.,  84 
Elliott.  E.  C,  74 
Elliott.  G..  120 
Ellis.  H.,   184.   199,  -30 
Ellys,  A.,  41 
Elser.   F.   B..   213 
Eltzbacher.  P.,  94 
Elwall.    E..   25 
Ephraim,   pseud.,    138 
Erbery,  W.,  8 
Erskine,  T.  E.,  46,  53.   '72 
Ervin,   C.    W.,   84,    «72 
Esquiros.  A.,  60 
European   war.   209- 
Evans.  J..    i33        „      ,.    „ 
Evan!,.      Robert      Harding 

Sec  Publicola,  pseud. 
Evans.   T.  A..    128 
Evening   Mail,    New   \ork, 

213 
Ewer.  W.   N..  98 
Ewing.    A..    213 
Exline.  F.,  74 
P.,   A.    C,    120 
F.,  S.  A.,  132 
Fabreguettes.  P.,   60 
Faivre.  A.,  60 
Falkner.  R.  P..  74 
Fanfernot,  E.,  60 
Fantin  des  Odoards.   A.   t- 

N..   40 
Farmer,   C.    E..    230 
Farrand.   M..   ed..   74 
Farrer.   A.   S.,    138 
Farrer,   J.   A.,   230 
Faulkner.  J.   A..    166 
Faulkner,  T.  A..   230 
Faurc.    G..    60 
Fawcett.  B.,  34 
Fawcett,  J.  W..   189.  213 
Fawkes,  A.,  167 
Fell,  E.  F.  B..   146 
Fell,   J..    34.    35 
Fenner,  A.,   127 
Fenton,    F.,   74  .,,      _ 

Fernftndez  del  Castillo,  F,. 

230 
Feme,  H.,  4.  6 
Ferrari.   C,   67 
Ferrari,   R.,   225 
Ferrer    y    Guardia,    F.,    94 
Feyler,   F..   213 
Fezer.   J.   J..    38 
Field.    D.    D..    120 
Field.   J.   A.,    189 
Fienncs,  N..  4 
Figueroa,    P.    P..    58 
Fillmore,  M.,   135 
Filmer,    E.,    20 
Finch.    J.,    136 
Finlason,    \V.    F..    120 


Fischer,  P.  D.,  213   ^ 
Fish,  VV.   H.,   138,   167 
Fisher,  J.   K.,  S3,   120 
Fisher.  S.,   n 
Fisk,?   141 
Fisk,  T..   120 
Fiske.  A.  K..   132 
Fitch.   C.  E..    142 
Fite,   W.,   213    „ 
1-it^gcrald,    P.    H.,    173  ^ 
FitzCierald.     W.     G..     169. 


Fitzpatrick,    H.,    128 
1-iizroy.  A.  H.,  40 
Fitzwater,    E.  W.,  88 
Flanni^an,  S.  L.,   108 
Flaubert,    G.,    230 
Fleetwood,    VV.,    22,    23 
Fleming,   C,   27,   34 
Fletcher,   C.    R.   L.,    142 
Flitcrott,   H..   31 
Flodstrom.  I..  70 
Flood,  J.   C.    H.,    120 
Flores  Alatorre,  A.,   i37 
Flower,  B.,   128 
Flower,   B.   O.,   74,   88,  94 

150,   151.   »S2,   194 
Flowers,     S.,    98 
Foerster,    F.   W.,    i79 
Folger,   P..    140 
Folkard,    H.    C    120 
Foote,  E.  B.,  179,  180,  189, 

190,    194,    230 
Foote,   E.   B.,  jr.,   180,    i99 
Foote.  G.  W.,   155 

Ford,    D.    M.,    53 

Ford,  J.   L.,    169 

Ford,    P.    L.,    173 

Forel,  A.   H.,   230 

Foreman,    F.    I.,    213 

Forney,  J.  W.,   163 

Forsler,   J.,    138 

Forsyth,    P.    T.,    148 

Foster,   J.    H.,    180,    195 

Foster,   Sir   M.,   34 

Foster,    R..    74 

Foubert.  L..  108 

Fouillee,   A.,  60 

Foulis,    H..    10 

Foulke.    W.    D.,    105 
'     Fowell,  F.,  and  Palmer,  F., 


Fowlds.  G.,  jr.,   180 

Fowle,    D..    28 

Fowler.   S.  B.,   230 

Fownes,   J..    33 

Fox,    C.    J.,    42 

Fox,  G.,  8 

Fox,  J.,  74,  94.    100,   102 

Fox,   J.    C,    117 

Fox.    VV.    J.,    134.    iSS 

Fra      Carlos,     pseud,      bee 

Moore.    C.    A.,    jr. 
France,   H.,    230 
France,   J.   I..   74.   88 
France.    Ministere    des    at- 
faires  etrang&res,  180 

Frank.   G.,   74 

Franke,  J.,  65 

Franklin,  F.,  94 

Franklin,   F.    G.,    112 

Eraser,  H.,   120 

Eraser,  J.    F.,   230 

Fraud,  99- 

Fraxi,    P.,   230 

Free,   J..    29 

Free   speech   committee.   95 

Free   speech   league.   95 

Freeman.   A.,  95 

Freeman.  D..    163 

Freeman,    E.   A.,   84 

Frend.    VV..    46 

Freund,   E.,    74 
Fry.   J..    230 

Fry.  R.,  133 
Fuld..    ISS 
Fuller.   VV..    18 
Fumagalli.   G.,   236 
Furneaux.   P.,   29,   34 

G.,    M.    G..    206 
Gale,  L.   A.   E..    190 
Gallier,  H.   de..  61 


Gallonio,    Father,    i45 
Gallasher.   A.,  225 
Gannett,    L.    S.,    88 
Ganss,    H.    G.,    167 
Gardner,  VV.  A.,   120 
Garner,  J.   VV.,    105 
Garnctt,    E.,    75 
Garnett,    S.    J.,    2 
Garrett,   G.   P..   214 
Garrison.  VV.  L.,  105 
C.arvie.  A.  E.,   149 
Gasparin,  A.  E.,   136,   139 
Gates,    E.,    167 
Gauttreaux,   S.,  230 
Gay,  J.,   231 
Gaynor,   W.   J.,    120 
Gee,   E.,   is 
Gee,    H.,    143 
Geere,    F.,    214 
Geffcken,   H.,    163 
Geiger,    L.,    65 
Gentile,   G.,   67 
Gentz,  F.,  S3 
George,  H.,    100 
Gerard,  ].,   132 
Germain,   F.,   61 
Germany.    Laws,    Statutes, 

etc..  22s 
Gerrald.   J..   48 
Gerstenberg,    H..    65 
Ghis.    P.,   95 
,     Gibbons,    T.,    34 
Gibbs,    P.,    214 
Gibson,  J.,   128 
Giese,   VV.,   6s 
Gilbert,   J.,    no 
Gildersleeve,   V.    C,    75 
Gillett.   E.   H.,   139 
Gillette,  J.  M.,   113 
Gilman,  C.   P.,   113 
Gilmour.   J.    P.,    i99 
Giovannitti,  A.,    108 
Girardin,    E.    de.,    6t 
Gitterman,    A.,    173 
C.iuliari,    G.    B.    C,    i39 
Gladden,   VV..   167 
Glasgow.   J.    VV.,    207.    208, 

-'3' 
Gla.>^.sberg,    B.,    113 
Glyn,    E.,    231 
Gnau,    H.,     65 
Goblet,   R.,   132 
Godkin,    E.    L.,    121 
Goldman.  E.,  88,  93,  95,  98, 

108,  180,  190.  214 
Goldsmid.  F.  H..  13s 
Goldwater.  A.  L..  190 
Gompers,   S..   88,    102.    103. 

Good,  E.  T..  103 

Goodman,  D.  C,  231 

Goodrich,   H.  F.,  214 

Goodwin,  J..  7 

Gordon,    A.,     151 

Gordon.   J.,    163 

Gordon,  T.,  28 

Gosse,    E..   S3 

Gott,   J.    VV..    155.    190 

Graham,  L.  H.,   103 

Graham,   W.    R.,    214 

Graham-Barton,    A.,    149 

Grane,    VV.    L.,    214 

Grannan.  J.   C,   75 

Grannis.    E..    231 

Grant.   F.,    18 

Grant.   M.    R..    167 

Grant,  P.   S..   151 

Grasty,    C.    H.,    75 

Gratlier,    A.    de.,    61 

Graunt,  J..  8 

Graves.    J.    T.,    214 

Graves.  T.,  141 

Gray,   A.,    167 

Gray,  J.,   36.   S3 

Great     Britain.     Court     of 

Star  Chamber,   173 
Great    Britain.   Foreign  Of- 
fice.  173 
Great     Britain.    Home    De- 
partment.   180 
Great    Britain.    Laws,    stat- 
utes,  etc.,    225 


Great   Britain.   Parliament., 

180 
Great    Britain.    Parliament. 
House  of  Commons,   167 
Greeley,   H.,   129 
Green,  B.,  105 
Green,   F.    V.,   214 
Green,    J.    C,    128 
Green.    VV.    R.,    214 
Greene,   M.    L.,    146 
Greene,   R.   VV.,   173 
Grecson,  W.  G.,  75 
Greg,    P.,    231 
Gregory,   S.    S.,    117 
Gregory,  T.   W.,   214 
Grenville,   G.,  32 
Greville,   R.   K.,    169 
Grey,  J.  G.,  comp.,  S3 
Gritlith,     M.,    4 
Grimkc,    F.,    7S 
Grisellc,    E.,    61 
Groeii    van    Prinsterer,    G., 


Grundy,   J.,    133 

Gsell.    P..   214 

Gueilin    de    Gucr,    E.,    ed., 

bi 
Guernsey.  R.  S.,  114 
Guiehard.  A..  61 
(.juillaume.   J.,    61 
c;unn,   J.    E.,    149 
Gunn,    J.    VV.,    108 
Guyot,    Y.,   61 
Hadley,  A.  T.,   75 
Haeckel,    E.    H.   P.   A.,    6s 
Haffer,   P.   R..   128 
Haines,  A.   P.,  89 
Hake,  A.    E.,   53 
Hakewil,    W.,    4 
Hale,    B.,    75 
Hale,    D.,    170 
Hale,  J.,    6 
Hale,    S.,    171 
Hale.   VV.   B.,  215 
Halewyck,    M.,    51 
Hall,  E.,   128 
Hall,  G.   S.,  215 
Hall,  J.,   3.   8.   20.   231 
Hall,    R..    45,    47,    50,    134 
Hallam,  H.,  S3 
Hallays-Dabot,    V.,    6t 
Halleck,   H.  VV.,  215 
Haller,    F.,     103 
Hallinan,   C.  T.,   75 
Hamel,    F.,    147 
Hamilton,  Lord  A.,   128 
Hamilton,  J.   J.,   89 
Hammond,  H.,  4,  5,  6 
Hampden,    J.,    14 
Hand,   ].,    108 
Hanford,   C.   H.,    199 
Hankin.    E.,    173 
Hapgood.  H.,  75.  95.  231 
Hapgood,  N.,  2 IS 
Hard,    VV.,    103,    i73 
Harden,    M.,    215 
Harding,  T.   S.,  75.   '80 
Hardwick.  T.   VV^,  151.   i73 
Hardy,    T.,    48 
Hardy.  VV.  J..  143 
Hare,  F..  22 
Hargreaves,  VV..  53 
Harland.    R.    O..    231 
Harnian.  C,  208 
Harman,    L..    199 
Harman,    M.,    180,    199 
Harris,    F.,    180,    195 
Harrison,    A.,    215 
Hart.  A.  B..  84.   143 
Hart.    F.    B..    117 
Hart.   F.   G..    215 
Hart.    VV..    231 
Hartman,  F.    L..    108 
Harvey.    A.,    75.    95.    «oo, 

108,  i8o,  195 
Harvey,  G.   B.   M..   75 
Harvey.  J.   H..  53 
Hasselt.    VV.   J.    C.   63 
Hastings,   H.    L.,    141 
Hastings,   VV.,    42 
Hatch.  A.  F..  121 
Hatchard.  T..    128 
Hatfield.   R.    M..    170 


244 


INDEX 


Hatin.    L.    E..    6i 

Hatzipetros,  N.,   i8o 

Hauser,   H.,    145 

Havel,    H.,   gs,    19s 

Hawkes,    Sir  J.,   49 

Hawkins,  J.,  39 

Hawthorne,  J.,    199 

Hay,  G.,  49 

Hay.  J.,  128 

Hayes,   E.,    108 

Haynes,  E.  S.  P.,  146,  148, 

149,  173.  195 
Havm,  H.,  231 
Hays,  A.  G.,  89 
Hayter,  T.,  28 
Haywarde,  J.,  2 
Haywood,  VV.  D.,  100,  215, 

225,  226 
Hazeltine,  A.   \V.,  215 
Hazeltine,   C,    187 
Headlam,    C,    215 
Heaford,   W.,   95 
Healy,   P.   J.,    163 
Hearst,  W.   R.,    173 
Heckethorn,  C.  W.,  231 
Hedin,  S.  A.,  215 
Hedrick,  B.   S.,   105 
Hegarty,   W.   J.,    149 
Hegewisch,  D.  H.,  47 
Heinemann,  F.,  167 
Helmholtz,  H.  L.  F.,  140 
Hemenway,   H.    B.,    75 
Hemmer,  H.  M.,   146 
Henderson,    D.    B.,    180 
Henderson,   G.,   95 
Henderson,   G.    C.,    173 
Henderson,   VV.  G.,   121 
Hendriks,   D.   L.,   167 
Henry,    W.    W.,    141 
Henson,   H.   H.,    167 
Herbert,    H.,    139 
Heresy,     166- 
Hershey,  A.   S.,  215 
Hertell,  T.,  13s 
Hertz,    B.   R.,    75 
Herve,  E.,  61 
Herve,   G.,   95 
Herzog,    A.    W.,    156,    180 
Hespe,  J.  C,  38 
Hess,  G.  L.,  206 
Hetherington,    H.,    156 
Heusde,  A.   C,   68 
Hey,   R.,    35 
Heyde.   W.   G.,    65 
Heyl,    C,   231 
Heymann,  E.,   121 
Heywood,    A.    F.    T.,    187, 

199 
Heywood,    E.    H.,    208,  231 
Heywood,   S.,  40 
Hibbard,    H.,    167 
Hibbcn,     P.,     215 
Hildrop,   J.,    27 
Hilgers,   J.,    147.    231 
Hilgrenreiner,   K.,    132 
Hill,  F.   T.,  96 
Hill,   M.,    comp.,    75 
Hill.    M.    A..    loi 
Hillard,    S.,    20 
Hilquit,    M.,    213 
Himes.    C.    F..    167 
Hinman,   R.   R.,    136 
Histrio-mastix,   3 
Hoadly,    B.,   22,    23,  26,    39 
Hoar,    G.    F.,    76 
Hobbes,  T.,  8,   13 
Hobhouse,    Sir   B.,   46,  48 
Hobson.,  42 
Hodges,   G.,    151 
Hoefslach,  A.,   16 
Hoensbroach,  P.  von,  144 
Hoeven,    A.,    68 
Hoffmann,   L.,   65 
Hofstede   de   Groot,   P.,   69 
Hogg.  T.    E.,    121 
Hoibach.  P.  H.  T..  32 
Holbrook,  A.  H.,   121 
Holcroft,   T.,   48 
Holland,  F.  M.,   141,  MS 
Hollev,   M.,    140 
Hollick,   F.,   231 
Hollis,   Lord.,    13 
Holly,    I.,    31 


Holm,   A.,  31,    33 
Holm,    P.    E.,    70 
Holmes,  J.   H.,  89,  315 
Jiolyoake,   G.   j.,    142,    156 
Holt,   F.   L.,    121 
Holt,  H.,  89 
Homans,   T.   S.,   180 
Hone,  W.,  156 
Hope.,   140 
Hopkins,    J.    B.,    54 
Hopkins,    P.,    231 
Horner,  J.  M.,  76 
Horowitz,  J.,   6s 
Horsley,  S.,  42 
Hoss,  M.,  65 
Hough,  C.  M.,  215 
Houghes,  M.,  232 
House,   F.   B.,   76 
House,   S.   D.,  215 
Housman,  L.,   170 
Houston,  G.,  156 
Howard,   G.   B.,    144 
Howard,  H..  2 
Howard,  L.  C,  ed.,   76 
Howard,  W.  L.,   199 
Howarth,   E.,    190 
Howe,    F.    C,   76,   98,    206 
Howe,  J.,   128 
Hoy,   O.  P.,  134 
Hubbard,  J.  M.,  195 
Howgill,  F.,    11 
Hubberthorne,   R.,    11 
Hiibner,   L.,    146 
Huddleston,   G.,    173 
Hudson,  F.,    114 
Hugenholtz,  P.  H.,  jr.,   163 
Hughes,  H.  S.,  19S 
Hughes,   J.,    163 
Hughes,  L.,  49 
Hughes,    W.,   4 
Hugo,  V.  M..  6s 
Hume,    D.,    54,    76,    134 
Hunt,   A.    F.,    76,   8g,    195, 

203,    204 
Hunt,   F.    K.,    137,    173 
Hunt,   G.,    163 
Hunt,   T.    \V.,    142 
Hunter,   R.,  128 
Hunter,    W.,    39 
Hunter,  W.  A.,   156 
Hurlbut,   E.   P.,    199 
Hurley,    T.,    232 
Hurt,  W.,  89,  180,   199,  233 
Huss,  J.,   ISO 
Hutcheson,  G.,  S4 
Hutchings,    R.,    34 
Hutchins.,  33 
Hyde,  C.  C,  216 
Hyde,  J.  W.,  S4 
Hyde,   W.   D.,    113 

II   Congresso  di   Lione,    144 
Index     librorura     prohibito- 

rum,   232- 
Industrial    workers    of    the 

world,   100- 
Ingersoll,    R.    G.,    141,    is6f 

202 
Inglis,  A.,  96 
Injunctions,    102 
Isle  of  Man.   Statutes,   181 

Jack,    G.,    129 
Tack,  G.  N.,  23s 
Jackson,  J.,  loi 
Jackson,   T.  A.,    156 
Jacoby,  A.,   137 
Tames,  C.  F.,  14s 
James,  C.   L.,    181 
Jameson,  M.,    105 
Janmart  de   Brouillant,   L., 

141 
Tastrow,   J.,    113 
jay,  W.,    105 
Jefferson,  T.,  143 
Jeffreys,  G.,  18 
Jenkins,   D.,   7 
Jenkins,  J.,  163 
Jenkins,  John,  163 
Jtphson,    H.    L.,    76 
Jcze,  G.,  216,  226 
Jim  Jam   Junior,   23s 
John,   H..   235 
Johns,    D.,     108 


Johnson,    A.,    216 
Johnson,  C.   R.,    108 
Johnson,    H.    W.,    173 
Johnson,  L.,  36,   14s 
Johnson,  R.  Z.,   163 
Johnson,    S.,    16 
Johnson,   W.    L.,    19s 
Johnston,  H.   H.,  216 
Joinville,    L.   A.    de,    191 
Joncieres,    F.,    61 
Jones,  A.  T.,   141,   142,  143 
Jones,  J.,   2S 
Jones,  M.,  89 
Jordan,    D.    S.,    216 
Joy,    B.,    121 
Joyce,   H.,    S4 
Joyce,   James,    23s 
Joyce,  Jeremiah,   48,    134 
Judah,  S.  B.  H.,  23s 
Judex,   pseud.,    204 
Justitia,    pseud.,    204 

Kahl,   W.,   65 
Kallen,   H.   M.,    19s 
Kannengieser,  A.,   76 
Karl  Theodor.,  47 
Karsner,   D.,    109 
Kawerau,  G.,    143 
Reach,  B.,  14 
Kearney,  P.,   181 
Keate,  W.,  42 
Keating,   J.,   S4 
Keedy,    E.    R.,    208 
Keifer,  D.,  216 
Kellogg,  A.   P.,    109 
Kelly,    G.,   24 
Kelly,    H.,    76,    gs,    96 
Kelly,   R.  J.,   54,    121 
Kelsey,   F.   W.,    121 
Kennedy,   C.,   76 
Kennerley,    M.,     195 
Kenyon,  J.,  135 
Keralio,  L.  F.  G.,  42 
Kerr,   C.,   76 
Kerr,    D.    F.,    200 
Kerr,   J.    M.,    174 
Kerr,    R.    B.,    235 
Key,   E.,   23s 
Keysor,    W".    W.,    121 
Kidder,   M.   G..  235 
Kidgell,   J.,   29 
Kiefer,   J.    E.,    121 
Kilmer,  J.,   216 
Kime,  J.   W.,  204 
King,  H.  M.,  143,  145,   146 
King,   J.    C.,    197 
King,  John,   76,   115,   121 
King,  Judson,   109,  216 
King,   L.  J.,    IS3 
Kingan,  J.,   129 
Kingsburg,  H.,    163 
Kingsdown,   T.    P.-L.,    115 
Kingston,   G.,   54 
Kippis,  A.,  33 
Kirk,    E.    E.,    109 
Kittle,  W.,   76 
Klein,    A.   J.,    163 
Kliefeld,  K.,  206 
Klotz,   J.    C,   31 
Kluit,  W.  P.   S.,  69 
Knapp,   W.  I.,  23s 
Kneeland,   A.,    156 
Knoedler,    E.,    188 
Knowles.,    129 
Knowlton.    C.,    235 
Knowles,  F.,   109,  208 
Knox,   T.    F.,    140 
Knuttel,  W.  P.  C.,  23s 
Kohlcr,  M.  J.,  216 
Konda,  M.,   181 
Krais,    E.,    206 
Krause,  E.,  145 
Krauss,    F.,    204 
Kropotkin,  P.,   235 
Krossnogeon,  M.,   163 
Kruseman,    A.    C.,    69 
Knh,    E.   J.,    96 
Kuttner,  A.  B.,  216 

Labadic,  E.,   216 
La   Boetie,    E.,   51 
Labor   unionists,    103- 
Laboulaye,  E.  R.  L.  de,  138 
Lachfevre,   F.,    147 


Lachowsky,   H.,  98 
Lacombc,  H.,  de.,   76 
Lactanlius,  L.  C.  F.,   15 
Lacy,  G.,  90 
Lafayette,   M.  J.,  61 
Laferrifere,   E.   L.  J.,  61 
La  Follette,  R.  M.,  216,  226 
Laidler,  H.  W.,   109 
Lalama,  V.  de.,  70 
Lamar,    W.    H.,   316 
Lambert,   J.,    48 
Lambert,  W.  A.,  149 
Lamcnnais,    H.    F.    R.,   de, 

143 
Lamotte,   C.,    17 
Landis,  S.  M.,  204 
Landon,  P.,  216 
Landriot,  J.  F.  A.  T.,  61 
Lane,    W.    D.,    113 
Langenhuysen,   A.   P.,  69 
Laiigford,    J.    A.,    138,    174 
Languet,  H.,   i 
I^aporte,   A.,   19s 
Larkin,  J.   E.,   90,    181,   200 
Earned,   J.    N.,    76 
Lassalle,    F.,    109 
Lastcyrie,    A.    J.,    61 
Latour-Dumoulin,    C.,   62 
Laud,   W.,   3,    17 
Lauer,    P.    E.,    142 
Laurent,    C.,    51 
Lavollee,  R.,   181 
Law,   S.  A.,    138 
Law,   T.,   47 
Law,   W.,   25 
Lawrence,   D.,    217 
Lawson,  J.  D.,  122 
Lawton,  A.  M.,   i86 
Layer,  C,   24 
Lea,   if.    C.,    142 
Leach,  J.,   40 
League   for  the   amnesty  of 

Political  prisoners,  217 
Leber,   J.    M.    C,   63 
Le  CCne,  C.,  is 
Lechevalier,   J.,    62 
Lecky,  W.   E.   H.,    150,   163 
Lee,  F.  G.,   187 
Lee,  J.,   146 
Lee,   T.   M.,   217 
Lee.   R.  W.,    iS7 
Leeds,   J.    VV.,    181 
Leffmann,    H.,    76 
Legal    treatises.    118- 
I^egatc,    B.,    2,    IS7 
Leggett,  VV.,  los 
Leighton,    A.,    6,    23s 
Leland,    J.,     132,    133,    136, 

164 
Lemarcier,   A.,    26 
T^emon,    C.,    181 
Leo   XIII,   Pope    144 
Lepage,   F.,    167 
Le  Poittevin,  G.,   217 
Le   Queux,   VV.,    217 
Leroile,  P.,   113 
Leroy-Beaulieu,  A.,    113 
Leslie,    J.,    129 
L'Estrange,   R.,    10,   12,   13, 

14,    IS 
Lewis,   A.   H.,   90 
Lewis,   D.,    204,   235 
Lewis.    E.    G.,    181 
Lewis,   E.    M.,    194 
Lewis,   Sir  G.   C.,   54 
Lewis,    L.,    T22 
Lewis,  T.,  23 
Lewis,  VV.  D.,   122,   157 
Lewinsohn,  J.  L.,  113 
Lewnisky,  J.,  65 
Lex,  pseud.,   181 
Lex  rex.   Rutherford,   S.,   S 
T^eydekker,    M.,    19 
Leymarie,    A.,    62 
Lezius.   F.,    145 
Libanoff,    G.   M.,    171 
Libel,     114- 
Liher,    B.,   90,    195 
Liebcr,  F.,  54 
Liebich,    K.,    65 
Licbv,  A.,   109 
Liehi,  O.,   6s 
Lilburn,    J.,    5,    7,    235 


IXDEX 


245 


Liliencron.    R.,    65 
Lilly,  W.  S.,  54 
Limborch,  P.,  26 
Lincoln,    W.    S.,    105 
Lindcnberger,  H.,  65 
Linton,   E.   L.,    181 
Linton,  W.  J.,  54 
Lipman,   S.,  98 
Lippman,  W.,  77,  217 
Lipsius.  J.    3 
Liszt,    F.    E.,   6s 
Littell,    P..    77 
Little,  J.  J.,   129 
Littlejohn,    D.   C.,    i2g 
Livingston,    E.,    85 
F^loyd,    C,    30 
Lloyd,   H.   D.,   77 
Lloyd,   W.,    15 
Lloyd.    W.    B.,    217 
Locke,  J.,    16,   25,   31,    139, 

144.    14s 
Lockhart,  A.  F.,   151 
Locre,   J.    G.,   62 
Lodge,    Sir    O.    J..    182 
Lodge,   T.,    1 
Lodian,    L.,    77 
Loffler,   F.   A.,   65 
Lofft,    C,    38,   43 
Lombard,  D.,  27 
London,   M.,   217 
London  Missionary  society, 

105,   106 
Long,   J.    L.,   54 
Long,    J.    R.,    77 
Loomis,    H.    N.,    129 
Loomis,  W.   W.,  77 
Lorbeer,  J.,   65 
Lorimer,  J.  C,   123,   164 
Loti,    P..     235 
Louis,    I.    B.,    191 
Louys,   P.,   236 
Lovat.    S.    F..    28 
Lovejoy,  A.  O.,   113,  217 
Lovejoy.  J.    C,    106 
Lovctt.  R.   M.,  98 
Lowell,  A.    L.,    77,  90,   217 
Lowry,  A.   M..   167 
Lundberg,   A.,   217 
Luzac,  E.,  28 
Luzzatti,    L.,    dy 
Lyman,   T.,   jr.,    129 
Lytton,   E.    R.    B.,   54 

M.,  D.  J..  70 
McCabc.  J.,   06 
McCarthey,   <'.    H.,    174 
^ra^rarthy,    D.,     54 
McCarthy,  M.  J.  F.,  168 
McCartin,   J.    F..    123 
MacClellan,  C...  129 
McCormick,    P.,    148 
McCuUagh,    F.,    54,    77 
MacDonald,   E.   M..   182 
Macdonald,    G.    E.,    132 
MacDonald,  G.  M.,   143 
MacDonald,  J.  L.,   142 
MacDonald,   W.,    151,   217 
MacDonell,  J.,    157 
McElroy,   R.    M.,   217 
Macfadden,    B.,     187,    200, 

208 
McGuire,   W.   D.,  jr.,   206 
Mclllwaine,   H.   R.,    143 
Macirone.   F.,   123 
McKaig,    R.,   00,    109,   217 
McKccver,  C.  A.,   109,    174 
McKeller.  K.  D..  174.  2i(> 
Mackenzie,   P.,    174 
McKeown,   E.  J.,    187 
McKim,    R.,    152 
Mackinnon,   J.,    54 
Mackintosh,  Sir  J.,   129 
M'Laren,  A.   D.,    150 
Maclean,    C.    174 
McLcmore,  C,  118 
McLeod,  H.,   191 
M'Loughlin,    P.,    129 
McManus,  P.  J.,  196 
McMastcr,  J.  B..  77 
Mac  Nair,  \V.,  103 
McNatt.  T.   L.,  200 
McVey,  F.  L.,   113 
McVick^i,   J.    H.,    77 


Madan,  S.,  43 
Madden,  R.  R.,   138 
Madrolle,    A.,    62 
Maeterlinck,   M.,   200 
Maffert,   L..  62 
Magcc,    J.,    129,    130 
Magnes,  J.  L.,  90 
Magon,   R.   F..  98 
Mailhor,  J.   B.,   62 
Maitland,    F.    VV'.,    123 
.Makemie,    F'.,    19 
Malchow,   C.    VV.,   204,   236 
Malcsherbes,   C.    G.,   62 
Mallock.   W.  H.,  54 
Manga.sarian,    M.   M.,    132 
.\lan.vficld.  Sir  J.,  34 
Marchegay,    H.,   62 
Marchesini,   G.,    147 
Marcuse,   J.,    204 
Mareo,  A.,  67 
Margaret,   M.,   48 
Marolles,    L.,   39 
Mar-Prelat,  M.,   50 
Marshall,   A.,    128 
.\L.rsh:.ll,  L.,  217 
.Martin,     F.    R.,    218 
Martin,    11.,    174 
Martin,  L,  25 
Martin,  J.,   43 
Martin.    P.   J.,    30 
Martin,    S.,    31 
Martin-Achard,  A.,  123 
Maru,    L.,  68 
Afarx.,    146 
Masi^res,   F..   54 
Masfrand,  R.,   115 
Masoch,   S.,   236 
Masson,   D.,  55 
Matagrin,  A.,  62 
Mather,    S.,    27 
Matthews,   B.,    236 
Matuschka,   M.,   66 
Maude,    VV.   C,    157 
Maudevillc.    B..    24 
Mauduit,   I.,    33 
Mavity,    N.    B..    77 
May,    T.    E.,    77,    174 
Mayer.   B..  77,    137 
Maver,  F.  A.,  66 
Mead,    L.,   and    Gilbert,    F. 

N.,   77 
Mealmaker,   G.,   40 
Mechlin,   J.    M.,    77 
Mciklcjohn.   A.,    77 
Melia    Pius..     130 
Melody,  J.  VV.,   182 
Mence.   R..  ss 
Mendelssohn.   M..   66 
Mendham,  J..   55,    236 
Menier,   E.  J.,  62 
Meredith.   VV.,    30 
Mcrillon.,   62 
Mcrmet,    E..    62 
Merriam,   C.    L.,    182 
Merrick,    F.    H..    109 
Merrill.  F.  VV.,  77 
Merrill,  S.,  1 15.  123 
Merson.   E..   62 
Mover.  F.  H..  236 
Miles..  218 
Mill.   J..    55.    174 
Mill,    J.    S.,    55 
Millard,    T.    F.,    218 
Miller,  S.,   130 
Milton.    J.,    5.     12.    43.    55. 

Miniiicrmus.    pseud.,    is? 
Minor.   R..  98 
Minles;uiaga.    V..    70 
Mirabeau.     H.     G.     R..     55. 

62 
Missimer.  J.  D.,   123 
Mitchell,  J.,    103 
Mix.    J.    B..     115 
Mockus.   M.,  80.  81.    157 
Moens.  H.  M.  B.,   187,   188, 

204.   218 
Moffatt.   C.    T74.   218 
Mole.  T..  36 
Montagu.   B..    13s 
Nfontague.  F.  C.  55 
^Tontague.  G.  H..  182 
Montaigne,   M.    de,    142 


Montalembert.     C.     F.     R.. 

136,    174,    I7S.   236 
Moore,    C.    A.,   jr.,    218 
Moore,   C.   C.,   209 
Moore,  G.,  78 
Moore,    G.    H.,    78 
Moore,    H.,   9 
Moore,  J.   VV.,  comp.,   78 
Morgan,  E.  M.,  90 
Morgan,   J.,    191 
Morland,    S.,   9 
Morris,  J.,   132,   140 
Morris,    M.    F.,    78 
Morris,  R..   191 
Morrison,   F.,   103 
Morrow,    P.    A.,    236 
Morse,    E.    L.   C.,    109 
Morse,    S.,   99 
Mortara,   M.,    168 
Morton,   A.   S.,    164 
Morton,  J.  F.,  jr.,   78,    182, 

191,    199,   200,   204 
Mosby.    T.    S.,    n8 
Moses.  E.  C.   147 
Moss,  A.   B.,    157 
Mote.  C.   H..    102 
Mugglcton.  L.,   12,   17,  157, 

236 
Muijncq.   A.,    18 
Muir,    T..    48,    175 
Muller,    A.,    188 
Muller,   K.,   70 
Miiller,   M.,   55.   70.    142 
Mullcr-Sanders.    H.,    66 
Muncktell.    S.    U.,    133 
Miinger.   T.   T.,    140 
Munster.    S.,    i 
Muquardt.   C.,    51 
Muriell,    C..    2 
Murphy,    J.    J.,    142 
Murphy.   J.    P.,    191 
Murray,   J..    32 
Murray.    L.,    170 
Murray.    L.,    comp.,    49 
Mussey,   D.    S..   78 
Muston.   A..    137 
Myers.    G.,    99 
Myers,    H.   L..    175 
Myers.  J.  C..   123 
Mylius,    E.    F.,   96,    175 

X;igorski.  A.,  66 

Nalson.  J.,   13 

Nani.  G.  B.  F.  G.,  236 

Nation.  €..   200 

National  civil  liberties  bu- 
reau. 218.  226 

National  defense  associa- 
tion.   182 

National  liberal  league,  182 

Nations.    G.    O.,    175 

Navarro.  G..   14 

Navlor,  J..    23 

Neal.   D..   26 

Nedham,  M.  See  Necdham. 
M. 

Needham,  M..  9 

Neefc.   P.,  66 

Nelles,   VV..    218 

Nelson,  VV.,  20 

Nettlau,   M.,   96 

Neville.,     50 

New,  J.   F.,  99.    100 

New  England  watch  and 
ward   society,    182 

New  Jersey.  Legislature. 
140 

New  York  society  for  the 
suppression    of   vice.    182 

Newell.   M.    I^..    115 

Newhall.   F.   H..    78 

Newman,  A.    E.,   218 

Newman,  J.    H..    147 

Newton.    Mrs   C.    37 

Newton.    VV.    VV..    78 

Nicholas,   G.,   85 

Nicholson,  VV.,   78 

Nicoll,    D..    175 

Nightingale.    B..    147 

Noah.  M.  M.,  130 

Noel.   B.  VV..    164 

Nonpartisans.   107- 

Norman.   R.  W.,    139 


North,   F.,   43 
Northbrooke,  J.,  i 
Northcote,  O.,  200 
Norton,  J.,    158 
Norway.    A.    H..    55 
Norwood.  P.,   191 
Norwood.    R..    8 
Nourrison,    P..    200 
Nowell,  T..  31 
Noyes.   J.    H..    191.    200 
Noyes.  T.  VV..   115 
Nummivuori.  J.,   188 

Oarc,  L.  J..  78 
Oberholtzer.  E.   P..  66 
O'Brian.  J.    L.,   219 
O'Coigly,  J..   49 
Ode-scalchi,    A..   68 
Ogden,  R.,  79 
Odgers,  VV.    B.,    123,    158 
O'Donnell.    T.    J.,    219 
Ogg.   F.  A.,   79 
O'Gornian,   E.,    139 
O'Hare,    K.    R..    iii.    224, 

227 
O'Higgins,  H.  J..  219 
O'Keeffe,   P.   P..    140 
O'Laughlin.  J.   C.,   219 
O'Leary,    A.,    37.    «39 
O'Leary,  J.  A.,   226 
Old    Playgoer,    pseud.,    191 
Olivcrcau.    L..   226 
Ollivier.    E..    62 
Olmstead.   A.   VV.,   219 
Oman,   J..    146 
Onahan.    VV.    J..    142 
Onesimus.   pseud.,    134 
Opdyke.    G..    130 
Oppenheimer.  M..  no 
Otis.   H.   G..   8s.    IIS 
Ottino.  G.,   236 
Overman,    L.    S.,    17S.    ^•^^ 
Owen.,  43 
Owen,    G.    E.,    90 
Owen,  J.,   10,  It 
Owen,    R..    134.    164 
Owen..  R.     D..     132.     t39. 

191 
Pacher.    G.   von.    219 
Pack.    E.,    158 
Pagan.   A.,   pseud..    152 
Pagani.    P..    68 
I'aguct,   B..  68 
Paine.    T..    30.    46.    47.    175 
Palladium     of     conscience, 

34 
Palmer,   i  ..    219 
Palmer.    E..     158.    164 
Palmer.    F..     210 
Palmer.  J..   ^6 
Palmer.  J.   L.,   170 
Palmer.  S.,  43 
Palmer,    T.    F.,    47 
I'altner.  J.  VV..    148 
r.tnkhurst.    C.    204 
Pappafava.  V..  66 
Pareto.  V'..   183 
Parke.    J.    R..    236 
Parker.   A.   B..  90,    102 
Parker.    S..    11.    «S 
Parker.    S.    C.    148 
Parker.    T..     106 
Parsons.    E.   C.    196 
Parsons,   J..    132 
Parton.    J..    200 
Paterson.   J..    56 
Paton.    J.    B..    183 
PatouN.  .\..  146 
Patterson.    M..    2 
Patterson.   T.,  ot 
Patter.'.on.  T.,   n8 
Paull.   H.   M..   56 
Pearce.    S..    44 
Peignot,  G..  62.    135.  236 
Pclletan,  E..  63 
Peltier.    J..    130 
Peltier,  J.  G..  175 
Pemberton,   T.,   56 
Penhallow,   M..  07.    «86 
Pentngton.  I..  10 
Penn.   VV.,    11.    t2.    15.    25. 

Pennvpacker,    S.   VV..    iiS 


246 


INDEX 


Pennsylvania.       House      of 

representatives,  191 
Pentecost,  H.  O.,  joo 
Perkins,   VV.,   2 
Perrinchief,   R.,    1 1 
Perris,    G.    H.,    2i.j 
Perrot,    J.,    9 

Persigny,  J.    G.    V.    V.,    63 
Peterson,    M.    C,    70 
Petit,   G.  A.,   6i 
Petkoff,  P.,  63 
Petre,   M.   D.,    ,40 
Pen,    P.,    10 
Pettit,    E.,    14 
Petzholdt,  J.,  236 
Pfau,   L.,  70 
Pfeiflfer,   G.   £.,    188 
Phelps,  E.  B.,  79 
Phifer,   C.   L.,    iii,    186 
Philagatharches,         pseud., 

133 
Philipe,  L.,  56 
Phillips,   W.,    106 
Phillipson,  D.,   142 
Philomusus,  S.,  25 
Phil-Theodosius.,    44 
Phipps,  C.,  24 
Pickering,  T.,  85 
Pierce,    W.,    147 
Pigge,   H.,    144 
Pillsbury,  P.,  201 
Pinchot,  A.,    :io,   219 
Pitcairn,  R.,  56 
Pitrat,  J.  C.,  164 
Place,  F.,  s6 
Plato.,   56,   79 
Piatt,    W.,    201 
Plockhoy,   P.    C,    9 
Plomer,  H.  R.,  148,   168 
Plumer,   W.,    106 
Plumer,   W.   S.,    137 
Plumptre,  C.   E.,    145 
Plumptre,  J.,    170 
Pobyedonostzef,  K.  P.,  66 
Pockington,   J.,    237 
Pohle,  J.,    148 
Pohlmann,   R.,   66 
Poindexter,    M.,    219,    227 
Poitou,  E.  L.,  63 
Pollard,    A.    F.,    219 
Pollock,  F.,  220 
Pollock,   J.,    56 
Polonius,     Junius     Brutu.<:, 

pseud.    See   Crell,  J. 
Pomeroy,    B.,    183 
Poole,  E.,  99 
Pooley,  W.,  14 
Popper,  W.,   144 
Poree,   C,  26 
Porter,   J.    N.,    123 
Po.st,    L.    F.,    96,    100,    201 
Potter,  H.,   106 
Pound,  R.,  79,   123 
Powell,  A.   C.  J.,   56 
Powell,  B.,   143,  196 
Power,  W.  K.,  220 
Price,    R.,   35 
Pressense,  E.  de,   164 
Priestley,  J.,  3,,  32.  37.  3S. 

39,  40.  44.  45,  46,   134 
Prime,    W.,    141 
Pringle,  C.  G.,   149 
Prinn,  W.   See  Prynne,  W. 
Pritchett,    H.,   79 
Proast,   J.,    16,    19 
Proffatt,  J.,  123 
Professor  Ordinarius, 

pseud.  113 
Property,    104 
Proscopos,  pseud.,    79 
Pryn,   W.   See  Prynne,  W. 
Prynne,    W.,    3,   4,    6,    7,   8, 

10.   II,   130 
Publicola,   pseud.,    56 
Puibaraud,  L.,  63 
Puigblanch,  A,,    134 
Puissant,    V.,   51 
Pulszky,  A.,  56 
Purves,    G.,    191 
Putnam,  G.  H.,  144,  146 
Putnam,  S.  P.,  143,   164 
Pyburn,  G.,  79 


Quarrington,  W.,   168 
Uuinet,   £.,  63 

K.,   E.    R.,   69 
Rabaud,  C,  142 
Radcliff,    E.,    33 
Radu,  R.,  68 
Rae,   VV.  F.,  79 
Rainolds,  J.,  3 
Ramsay,  J.,  18 
Randall,  J.  G.,  220 
Randall,  R.  W.,   141 
Rapier,  J.   L.,   100 
Rath,    J.,    124 
Rawnsley,  H.  D.,  196 
Rawson,    A.    L.,    183 
Ray,  J.   M.,   37,  44 
Raynaud,  T.,  8 
Reader,  W.,    147 
Redbeard,    R.,    96 
Reed,  J.,    110,  220 
Reed,   R.,  79 
Reed,    S.    M.,    164 
Reedy,  W.  M.,  79,  91 
Reese,    R.,    168 
Reeve,  \V.,  236 
Reformers,    198- 
Reid,   H.,   91,    100,    183 
Reid,  W.   E.,  100,   142 
Reinkens,  J.   H.,    140 
Reinvvald,  E.,   191 
Reithdorf,  F.  V.,  220 
Reitman,  B.  L.,  96,  191 
Religious  freedom,    132- 
Retana   y    Gamboa,    W.    E., 

237 
Reusch,  F.  H.,  237 
Reuterskiold,   C.   A.,   70 
Reynolds,    E.    S.,    79 
Reynolds,   J.    B.,   91 
Reynolds,  J.   N.,    100 
Rhode,    P.,    164 
Rich,  R.  A.,   124 
Richardson.    S.,    6 
Richings,    B.,     :36 
Richmond,  G.  H.,  209 
Richter,  L.,  63 
Rickaby,  J.,    133 
Riddell,    W.    R.,    124 
Rider,  S.  S.,   141,   144,   164 
Riley,    E.    S.,    151 
Ringwalt,  J.   L.,  ed.,  80 
Ritchie,   D.   G.,   56 
Rivet,    A.,    3 
Robbins,  A.  H.,  176,  221 
Roberts,   R.,   80,    149 
Roberts,  W.,  45,   141,   176 
Robertson,  J.  M.,  149,  150, 

161,    189 
Robertson,   W.,   20 
Robins,   D.,    158 
Robinson,  J.   H.,   221 
Robinson,    R.,    39,    133 
Robinson,  V.,   191 
Robinson,  W:  J.,    191,   192, 

iq6,    201,    221,    237 
Rock-hill,    S.    S.,    201 
Rocquain,    F.,   63 
Rodgers,  E.   C.,   118 
Roe,    G.    E.,    96,    no,    118, 

221 
Roebuck,  J.  A.,  56 
Rogeard.  A.,  237 
Roger.,  63 
Rogers,   A.,    164 
Rogers,    B.,   221 
Rogers,  H.,  139 
Rogers,   L.,   80,    183 
Roland  de  Villargues,  J.  J. 

F.,   63 
Romilly,    Sir   S.,    38 
Roosevelt,  T.,  124,  164,  221 
Root,   R.   K.,   80 
Rose,  J.  H.,  80 
Rosenbaum,  J.,  237 
Rosenburg,  B.,  80 
Rosenthal,   E.,   158,    196 
Roser,   H.   H.,    112 
Roslin,  K.   L.   C,   66 
Ross,  Albert,  80 
Ross,  Alexander,   12 
Ross,    E.    A.,   80,   91 
Ross,  O.  J.,   158 
Ross,  R.  S.,   158 
Rossi,   G..  68 


Roth,  €.,  66 
Rotzel,    H.,    221 
Rousseau,  J.  J.,  29 
Rousset,  G.,  comp.,  63 
Routledge,  J.,   80 
Row,  C.  A.,  158 
Row,   W.,   137 
Rowan,   A.   H.,   48 
Royer-Collard,  P.  P.,  63 
Ruedebusch,  E.  F.,  201 
Ruffini,    F.,    145.    I4« 
Ruggles,  S.  B.,  138,  168 
Ruppenthat,  J.    C.,    192 
Rusden,   G.    W.,    115 
Rush,    B.,    130 
Russdorf,    R.,   66 
Russell,   B.  A.   W.,   221 
Russell,   G.    W.    E.,    57 
Russell,  J.,    57 
Russell,    S.,    130 
Russell,  W.  T.,  146 
Rutherford,   L.,    176 
Rutherford,    S.,    5,    7 
Ryan,  J.  A.,  221 

S.,  E.,  96 

S.,  H.,   63 

Sabotage,    104 

Sacheverell,    H.,    20,    21 

Saint-John,   H.,   26 

St.  John,   \V.,    145 

Sainte-Beuve,  C.  A.,   139 

Sait,    E.   M.,    133 

Salminen,    J.,    188 

Salter,  W.  M.,  97 

Sampson,   E.,   80 

Sampson,  J.,  pseud.,  221 

Sampson,  W.,   130 

Samuel,  H.  L.,  221 

Sancroft,  W.,  16 

Sanderson,    E.,    151 

Sandon,  P.,  221 

Sanger,  M.,  237 

Sanger,  M.   H.,   192 

Sanger,  W.  W.,   196,  237 

Sankey-Jones.   N.    E.,   80 

Sarada  y  Salvany,  F.,  63. 
80 

Sargent,  N.,  221 

Sarkis,  S.,  57 

Satolli,  F.,   164 

Saunders,    W.    €.,    201 

Saunders,    W.    O.,    2.^7 

Savage,  W.,  57,  176 

Scapinelli,   E.,  68 

Schaff,   D.  S.,    ISO,    i  =;  1 

Schaff,  P.,  80,  141,  n^>i,  168 

Schaffer,   K.   O..   66 

Scheltema,   J.    F.,   69 

Schenk,    C.,    70 

Schierbrand,    W.,   80 

Schimmel,  G.   W.,  69 

Schletter,     H.     T.,    66 

Schmid,    R.,    71 

Schreiber,  C..    i  10 

Schreiber,    W.,     124 

Schreiner,    G.    A.,    221 

Schroeder,  E.   A.,  66 

Schroeder,  T.  A.,  80,  81, 
85.  91.  97,  I'",  no,  I  IS, 
118,  124,  M4,  147,  152, 
158,  159,  164,  176,  183, 
184,  188,  192,  196,  204, 
206,  221 

Schuermans,   H.,   63 

Schulte,   T.   E..    168 

Schultze,   E.,    1S5 

Schumacher,   K.,    124 

Schuyler,   L.    R.,  81 

Schwarz,    W.    E.,    50 

Schwarze,  F.  O..  66 

Schwarze,  L.  F.  O.  von. 
1 10 

Scorraille,  R.  de,  6%,   145 

Scot,   R.,   237 

Scott,  A.,  130,   134 

Scott,  J.,  so 

Scott,  L.,  81 

Scott,   N.   E.,   148 

Scudder,  V.  D.,   113 

Seaton,  A.  A.,  57 

Secretan,  C.,  63 
Sedgwick,  W.  T.,  81 

Sedition,  171- 


Sedition  laws,  83- 
Segur,  L.  G.,  63 
Selbie,  W.   B.,    148 
Seligman,    E.    R.    A.,    81 
.Scnigon,  T.,  63 
Sepp,    C,    237 
Sercombe,    P.    H.,    91,     185 
Serrano  y  Sanz,  M.,  237 
Sessions,   C.   W.,   222 
Seuffert,  H.,  97 
Severance,  C.,  81 
Seward,   W.    H.,    106 
Sex,    178- 

Seymour,  D.  C.,   i8s 
Seymour,  H.,  iS9,  201,  204 
Shaftesbury,  A.  A.   C,    16s 
Shaw,   G.   B.,    196,   204,  237 
Sheldon,  J.   P.,   118 
Sheavyn,   P.,    146 
Shepard,   A.   G.,    104 
Shepard,   R.   B.,    196- 
Shepherd,  A.   R.,   131 
Shepherd,   W.   G.,   222 
Sheppard,   J.    I.,    151 
Sherlock,  T.,   39 
Sherman,    L.    Y.,    176,    227 
Shillady,  J.,    no 
Shillady,  J.   R.,   91 
Shipler,   G.    E.,   81 
Shipley,  \V.  D.,  37 
Short,    VV.    M..    loi 
Shortland,  J.  R.,  140 
Shortt,   J.,   57 
Shrewsbury,  J.  T.,   135 
Shufeldt,    R.    VV.,    91,    185, 

188,  204 
Shuman,  E.  L.,   124 
Sidgwick,  H.,   57 
Sighele.  S.,  63 
Sikes,  T.,  16s 
Simmons,  F.  M.,  219 
Simon,  J.,   138 
Simons,  H.  A.,  99 
Sinclair,    U.,    222 
Singer,  G.  A.,  209 
Skill,   L.  J.,    197 
.'-•kirving,   \V.,   48 
Skork,  E.,  66 
Slander,    114- 
Slavery,    Chattel,    104- 
.^!edd.   A.,    106 
."-■leumer.  A.,   237 
Sloane,   V\^  M.,    145 
Slocum,    VV.   F.,  81 
Smalbroke,   R.,    25 
Smet,   J.    de,    115 
Smith,    A.    D.,    81 
Smith,    B.    B.,    136 
Smith,    C.    E.,    115 
Smith,   F.,    13 
Smiih.    G.,    138 
.Smith,   Sir  G.    M.,  82 
Smith,   H.,  82 
Smith,  H.  F.  R.,   148 
Smith,   Jeremiah,    82,    104, 

Smith,    John,    49,    106 
Smith,   Joseph   R.,    113 
Smith,    L.,    116,    185 
Smith,  M.   C,   176 
Smith,    M.   J.,    131 
Smith,    S.,    136 
Smith,    S.,    144 
Smith.    S.   S.,    125 
Smith,   T.    S.,    134 
Smith.    VV.,    10 
Smith,    VV.    C.,    loi 
Smith,  VV.  H.,   106 
Smith,  VV.    R.,    168 
Snijders,  J.   B.,   69 
Snow,   L.,    168 
Snyder,    VV.    L.,     125,    159, 

176 
Socialists,   107- 
Siiderhjelm,    A..    176 
Somers,  J.    S.,    18 
Southwell,  C.,   159 
Spalding,   N.  J.,    106 
."^paulding,  H.  G.,  116 
Spccker,  K.,   116 
Si)encer,  A.,    131 
Spencer,    H.    P.,    237 
Spencer,   T.   C.,    141 
Spender,    H.,   82 
.Sperry,    L.    B.,    192,    337 


INDEX 


247 


Spillman,    W.    J.,    91 

Spingarn,  J.    E.,    113 

Spira,   F.,    159 

Spotswood,    J.,    12 

Sprading,  C.  T.,  8^,  91 

Squire,    F.,   27 

Squires,  G.,  222 

Staley,   W..    13 

Stall,    S..    197,    237 

Stanchfield,  J.  B.,  222 

Stanford,  J.  L.,   1:3 

Stanley.  A.  P.,  165 

Sianton,  E.  C,  106 

Starkie,   T.,    125 

Starr,    S.,    160  .    _  . 

StefFens,  J.   L.,   82,   92,  97,    Thomson.  S.,   13 

loi,  i8s  Thornton,  R.  H.,  238 

Steiner,   F.,    151,    152,    160,    Thorpe,    H.    A.,    92 

165,    197,   223  Tillotson,  J. ,14 


Thatcher,  C.  A.,  131 
Theater,    169-,   205- 
Thewall,    J.,    48 
Thilo,    E.,    66 
Thomas,    B.,    35,    36 
Thomas,    J.    L.,     100, 

197 
Thomas,  N.,  223 
Thomas.  T.   P.,   114 
Thompson,  D.  G.,  186 
Thompson.  E.  N.  S.,   170 
Thompson,  J.   P.,    165, 
Thompson.  N.,    14 
Thompson,  W.   M.,  205 
Thomson,    J.,    85 


Villiot,   J.    de,   238 

V^incent,  N.,   n 

Vindex,  pseud.,   144 

Vinct,   A..    133,    165 

Vingtain,    L.,    64 
18,    Viollct,  E.,   165 

Virchow,   R.,    140 

Vizetelly.  H.,   197 

Volsing,  K.,  66 

Voltaire,  F.  M.  A.  de,   29, 
36,    138,   148.  238 
70    V'ollenhoven,    A.    M.,    van, 

Vorse,  M.  H.,  102,  224 


139 
222 
138 


Steinschneider,  M..  66 
Stennett,    S.,    33 
Stephen,  Sir  J.  F.,  57, 
Stephen,  Sir  L.,  57 
Stephenson,   G.   T.,    125 
Sterling,  J.,    loi 
Stern,   D.,   64 
Sterne,  C.,  82 
Stevens,   A.   W., 
Stevenson,  A.  E. 
Stevenson,    W., 
Stewart,  A.,   139 
Stewart,  C.  D.,  222 
Stewart,    H.    L.,    222 
Stewart,  J.,    11 
Stewart,    L.,    201 
Stillc,    C.    J.,    i6s 
Stillingfleet,    E.,    13 
Stimer,   M.,  98 
Stimson,    F.    J.,    82 
Stockdale,  J.,   44.    131 

177 
Stockham,  A.,   238 
Stoker,   B.,  206 
Stone,  M.   E.,    110,   i 
Stopes,    M.   C,    238 
Storey,  M.,  131 
Stoughton,  J.,    165 
Stow,   J.,    131 
Stowell,    E.    C,    113 
Strahan,    J.    A..    82 
Strahan,  W.,  21 
Stratton,   B.    F.,    238 
Straus.   O.    S.,    143 
Strong,    A.    L.,    loi 
Strong,  D.,   131 
Stroud.   G.   M.,    106 
Stuart,    M.,    135 
Stubs,  J.,   II 
Sturgion,  J.,    10 
Styles,   J.,    170 
Sullivan,  J.,  8s 
Sumner,   J.    S.,    185, 


Timperley,    C.    H.,    238 
Tindal,  M.,   17,  20,  25,  50, 

160         238 

Tirclli.    L.,    68 
Toland,    J.,    238 
Tolstoi,  L.  N.,  238 
Tomkins,  T.,  11 
Tonnere.  C,  45 
Torau-Bayle.  X.,  64,  144 
Toulman,  J.,  35,  40,  5°.  165 
Towers,  J.,   30,   38 
Towers,  W.  K.,  125 
Towgood.  M.,  33 
Townlcy,   A.    C,    no,   227 
Townsend,  A.   O.,   in,  223 
Townsend,   C.    C.,    118 
Townshend,  C.,  30 
Townshend,  J.,  125 
Train,  G.  F.,   202 
Traubel,  H.,    in 

J  76,    Tree,   F.  J.,   69 

Tree,    v.,    170,    206 
Trench,    F.    C,    92 
Trevelyan,   G.,   82 
Trials,    126-,    206-,    224- 
Tridon,    A.,    206 
Truelove,  E.,   192 
Tucker,   J.,    34.    35 
Tucker,   St.  G.,  85,   133 
Tullsen,   H.,    165 
Tumbridge,    W.,    160 
Turnbull,   R.,   170 
Turner,  E.  R.,  223 
Turner,    G.,    116 
Turner,   G.   L.,   168 
Turner,   H.    E.,    165 
Turner,  J.,  97 
Tutchin,  J.,   i6 
Tweedie,  W.   K.,   136 


W.,   G.,    126 
Wadsworth,    W.    S.,   82 
Waeyen,   G.    D.,    27 
Wagener,   A.,    143 
Wag^taff,  W.  R.,  168 
Waisbrooker,     L.,    92,     97, 

i86,  202 
Waitham,  R.,   160 
Wakefield,   G.,   45 
Wakeman,  T.  B.,  202 
Waldman,  L.,   in 
Walker,  E.  €.,  97,  202,  >« 
Walker.    G.,    37 
Walker,    J.,    22 
Walker,    T.,    46 
Wallace,    M.    G.,    177 
Wallas,  G.,  92 
Wallez,  J.   B.   G.,   69 
Wallis,  J.  P.,  82 
Walsh,    P.,    165 
Walthoe,    J.,    22 
Warburton,   W.,    31 
Ward,   B.   N.,    165 
Ward,    L.,    147 
Ward,  N.,  6 
Ward,   P.,    i6s.    166 
Warfield,   E.   D.,   87 
Warner,  A.  H.,  224 
Warr,  J.,   7 
Warren,   F.  D.,   in 
Warren,   H.   C.,   114 
Warren,  M.,  202,  238 
Warren,  M.  R.,  99 
Warschauer,    J.,    148 
Watchet,    H.    M.,    197 
Watson,  E.  H.  L.,  197,  206 


Watson,  J.,  140, 
Watson,  R.,  133 
Watson,  T.,  126 
Watson,    T.    E., 

202 
Watt,    R.,    57 
Watts,  R.,  22 


177 


197 


Sunderland,  J.  T.,   143 
Suppressed  books,  227- 
Sutherland,   D.,    116 
Swan  wick.    J..    38.     165 
Swasey,    G.,     192 
Swedcnborg,    E.,    238 
Swift,  J.,  45 
Sykes,  A.  A.,  23 
Symon,   J.    D.,    57 
Syndicalists,    111- 
Szinnyey,    S.    I.,    222 

Talbert,   R.   E.,    118 
Talcot.  N.,  223 
Talfourd.  T.   N..   160 
Talmey,  B.  S.,  238 
Tanner,    H.,    107 
Targile,   P.,    144 
Tarica,  A.,  64 
Taylor,    E.,    135, 
Taylor,    G.,   99 
Taylor,   H.,   82 
Taylor,   Jeremy,    6,   9, 
Taylor,   John,    131 
Taylor,    R.,    134,    160, 
Taylor,  W.   C.,   S7 
Teachers,  Freedom  of,  1 
Telmann,  F.,  82 
Tennyson,   C,    82,    197 
Terrada.   C.   de.,   58 
Thacher,  M.,    131 
Thachcr,    P.    O.,    160 


Twentieth     Century  Club,    Wayland    J-   A 
Boston,  206  Weatherly,   U.   G., 

Tyomies     publishing  com-    Weber,    B^   L.,    148, 
pany,   188  "r.u... 

Tytlcr,  W.   F 


in,    186 

■4 
149 


131 

lUrich,   K.,    125 
Umhauer,    E.,    197 
Underbill  E.  R.,  51,  i< 
Underwood,   J.    R.,    13 
Upham,  T.,    131 
Usher,  J.,   3.    '3 
Usoz   i   Rio.    L.    de.,    5 
Uthoff,  H.   C.   193 

V'acherot,  E.,  238 
Vance,    W.    R.,    223 
Van    der    Weyde,    W, 

15 


M. 


Webster,  J.,  22 
Webster,  N.,  166 
Weill,   A.,   64 
Weinberger,    H.,    98, 

224 
Weinstock,   H.,   102 
Wclcker,  C.  T.,  67 
Wellcr,   E.,  67,   238 
Wells,  E.,   114 
Wells,   G.   F.,    168 
Wells,  H.  G..  98,  in 
Welschinger,   H.,  64 
Wendte,   C.    W.,    149 
Wesley,  J.,   28,    166 
West,  H.  L..  82 
Wettstein,   O.,   71 


Loon,  H.  W.,  82,  223    W'harton,  F.,  82,  87 


160 


Van    Tricht.    V.,   51 
Vardaman,  J.  K.,  223 
Vargas,  I.   R.,  58 
Varma.    B.    I.    P.,    131 
Vassall,    W.,   28,    131 
Vaughan,  B.,   131 

«36    Vaughan,  R.,    138 

Veblin,  T.  B.,   114,   238 

186    Veeder,  V.,  82,   125 
Veibv,   J.,    238 

■2-    Verinder,   F.,    in,    152 
Vermeersch,   A.,    149,   a 
Viereck,   G.    S.,    125 
Vignaud,   J.,    170 
Vignola,  A.,   238 


Wharton,  P.,  24 
Whipple,   L.,    114 
White,  A.  D.,   144 
White,   B.,   in 
\\'hite,  E.,  98 
\Miite.  G.  A.,  57 
White,   I.    D.,   82 
White,  J.,  4 
White,  J.  W.,   224 
White.   T.   R.,  82 
Whitehead,  G.,  8 
Whitehead,   J.,   8 
Wbitehead,  W.  B., 
Whitfield,  G.,  27 
Whitgift,  J.,    1, 


Villard,  O.  G.,  82,  223,  224    Whiting,  James,  132 
Villedieu,  E.,  64  Whiting,  John,   22 


Whitley,  W.  T.,  151 
Whitman,  B.,   135 
Whyte,   A.,   47 
Whyte,  J.,    102 
Wickes,   E.  Z.   F.,   203 
Wieder,   C,   83 
Wielding,  C.  J.  F.  W.,   116 
Wightman,  E.,  2 
Wigmore,  J.  H.,  126 
Wild,  R.,   n 
Wiley,   W.  F.,  224 
Wilgus.    W.   H.,   92,   98 
Wilkes,   ].,   29,   30,    32 
Wilkin.sun,   L.   U.,    160 
Wilks,  M.  Athaliah.  49 
Willard,   A.   J.,   83 
Willemsen.  W..  69 
Williams.  A.   B.,   145 
Williams,  B.  W.,  132 
Williams,    D.,    33,36 
Williams,  E.,  27 
Williams.  J.  A.,   133 
Williams,     R.,     5,     8,     57, 

137,    145 
Williams,  T.,  83 
Williams,  T.  W.,   186 
Williams,   W.,  83 
Willis,   R.,    17 
Willmy,  M..  67 
Wills,   E.   v.,  87 
Willson,  I.  B.,  166 
Wilmer,   L.,   83 

Wilson,    E.,    57 

Wilson,  G.  E.,  186 

Wilson,  J.  B.,  203 

Wilson,   W.,    224 

Wilton,   S..   35 

Winter,  C,  238 

Wintcrbotham,  W.,  48 

Winthrop,  J.,  83 

Withers,  P.,   126 

Witherspoon,  J.,  170 

Witmer,    L.,    in 

Wittels,    F.,     193 

Wochlke,  W.  V.,   102 

Wolcott.  R.,  29 

Wolff,    P.    F.,    67 

Wollrych.   H.  W.,    137 

Wood,    C.    E.    S.,    227 

Wood.   R.    B.,   92 

Woodbridge,   H.   E.,  83 

Woodfall,    H.    S.,    32 

Woodford,    S.    L.,    141 

Woodhull,   V.   C.    186 

Woodin.  G.  W.,  126 

Woodruff,  C.  R.,  83 

Woods,   A.,  92,   102 

Woods,  C.  A.,  83 

Woodsworth.  J.   S..   177 

Woodward,  J.,   116 

Woodward,   P.    H.,   83 

Wooler,  T.  J.,  132,   i77 

Woolley,   W.,  48 

Workman,  G.,   6 

Workman.   H.   B.,    146      . 

World,     The,     New     York, 

'77 
Worthington,   G.,    i77 
Wortman,   T.,   83 
Wright,    E.,    203 
Wright,   J.,    134.    >6o 
Wycliffe.  J.,   160 
Wylie,   A.,    168 
Wvnne,   W.,   24 
Wyvall,  C,  133 

X,  J.,   239 

v..  H..  83 

Varmolinsky,  A.,  83,  I77 

Young,   A.   A.,  83 

Zanettini,  G.   B.,   68 

Zaretsky,  O.,  67 

Zench.    W.    E..     in,    224. 

Zenger,   J.    P.,   27.    28,    31. 

177.    178 
Zimmermann,     F.    W.     R-. 

67,   178 
Zola,    E..   64,    239 
Zollman.  C.  F.  G..  150,  166 
Zollner,  F.,  67 
Zung,  L.,  67 
Zuviria,   F..  58 
Zwicker,   D.,    10 


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